New Mexico Potters and Clay Artists
NMPCA Studio Tour

Studio Tour

Kristin C. Thacher

Cricket Appel
Michelle Arterburn
Karin N. Bergh
Elaine Biery
Kathryn Blackmun
Diane E. Botham
Tony Butler
Maxine Chelini
Kathryne Cyman
Sara Lee D'Alessandro
JoAnne DeKeuster
Kevin DeKeuster
Pamala S. Dean
Jay Dirago
Christine Evans
Karen Fielding
Joe Frey
Elizabeth Fritzsche
Philip Green
Sandra Harrington
Theo Helmstadter
Cheryl Hoagland
Marc Hudson
Z Jacobson
Linda R. Kastner
Daisy Kates
Michael Lancaster
Bari Lovewave
Rhonda Main
Lynne McCarthy
Karen K. Milstein
Darlene Nelson
Shel Neymark
Judy Nelson-Moore
Judith Richey
Kari Rives
Elizabeth Rose
Rita Ryan
Greta Ruiz
Abby Salsbury
Joey Serim
Carolyn Robbins Siegel
Mary Sharp Davis
Kristin C. Thacher
Michael Ray Thornton
Ann Trott
Layne Vickers Smith
Elaine Weaver-Spalek
Melanie Ann Wegner
Ruth Weston
Betsy Williams
Juanita Wolff
Tomás R. Wolff

P.O. Box 228
Cedar Crest, NM 87008
Tel: 505-286-7707 or Toll free: 877-286-7760
Fax: 505-286-7971 email: kristhacher@earthlink.net

Kris Thacher, Chago Canyon

“Chaco Canyon”

18” x 16”
stoneware sculpture clay
slip glazes, red iron oxide, gas-reduction fired to Cone 10

Biennial Southwest, Albuquerque Museum

 

“Shino”

14” x 16"
stoneware sculpture clay
shino and slip glazes

gas- reduction fired to Cone 10

Kris Thacher

Artist's Statement:

At first, the potter’s wheel fascinated me. I began working with clay in 1969 and spent countless hours learning to center and throw pots. Creating hollow forms from solid lumps of clay was quick and magical. I wanted to be a functional potter who made useful vessels to hold food and drink. Years later, I am still learning to make pottery. Some days I sit at the potter’s wheel but more often I stand at my worktable. I am engaged in the slow, meditative process of handbuilding. There is more time to think about the clay and the long tradition of potters-especially the Anasazi and Mimbres of the Southwest. Now I am a functional potter making metaphoric vessels to hold the imagination.

Most of my pottery is made from stoneware clay fired to Cone 10 in an electric kiln, a gas kiln, or a wood-fired anagama kiln. My glazes are made from commercially available materials or from local deposits of clay, minerals, and wood ashes. Each pot suggests its own firing method and surface treatment. Some receive many coats of glaze, some receive no glaze at all. Each pot has its own story to tell and speaks with its own voice.


Kris Thacher
“Kokopelli’s Flute”
2” x 16 “ stoneware sculpture clay, slip glazes; electric oxidation fired to Cone 10
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