I have been making pots consistently now for about
13 years. Bowls, containers of various shapes and sizes, cups, vases,
and a number of different pouring pots comprise the majority of my output.
Most often I am attracted to the subtle or understated qualities of a
form or surface, whether it is a building or a seed pod, and this in turn
influences my own work. I try for a basic simplicity in form and add complexity
through surface and detail, choosing surfaces that don’t reflect
a lot of light or those that are translucent.
The activities of making and using pots both soothe
and excite me. I am encouraged when others experience value added to their
lives by living with pots. Offering aesthetic, useful objects is a rewarding
way of attempting to contribute something of honest intent to the world.
I believe in the primary importance of form, followed closely by a descriptive,
supporting surface. The pieces I am happiest with reflect my affinity
for both the primitive and the refined, and often suggest an aspect of
quiet grace.
My pots are primarily thrown on the potters wheel
from porcelain or white stoneware clay. Many are then worked further by
altering the original round form and adding thrown or hand built parts.
I work in a small series and approach each piece individually, hoping
to recognize its expressive potential at the same time that I consider
the intended function. My wood-burning kiln requires an average of 17
hours of rhythmic stoking to reach temperatures exceeding 2350 degrees
Fahrenheit. This method of firing creates atmospheres in the kiln that
can contribute to a uniquely warm, complex surface on the pot. The heat
and resultant ash-bearing flame created in the firebox are pulled through
the kiln by the draft of the chimney, leaving a record of this flow in
the ash that is deposited on the pots in the ware chamber. The minerals
in the ash affect the glazed surface of the pot, and on areas I have left
unglazed the melted ash becomes a glaze of its own. This marriage between
the surface details imposed by my hand and the variations added by the
firing process allows me to indulge both my attention to detail and my
desire to invite an element of chance to the final outcome. It requires
me to heed both intuition and reason, and in turn offers a world of wonder
and surprise. Often I inject a sodium solution into the kiln towards the
end of the firing, which helps to smooth out the surface of the pots as
well as add brightness and complexity to the glazes.
EDUCATION
1997 Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville. Master of Fine Arts,
Ceramics
1979-1980 Indiana University, Bloomington. Master of Library Science
1978 Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis. Bachelor of Arts
RELATED EDUCATION AND EXPERIENCE
1999- Studio artist, Edwardsville, Illinois
Workshop Instructor: Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, Gatlinburg,
Tennessee (2003); Touchstone Center for Crafts, Farmington, Pennsylvania
(2002); Carbondale Clay Center, Carbondale, Colorado (1998)
Visiting Artist and Lecturer: Waubonsee Community College, Sugar Grove,
Illinois (October 2003); Craft Alliance Center for the Visual Arts, St.
Louis, Missouri (2003); Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (2002);
Webster University, St. Louis, Missouri (2001); Forest Park Community
College, St. Louis Missouri (2001); University of Missouri, Columbia,
Missouri (2000); Carbondale Clay Center, Carbondale, Colorado (2000);
John Burroughs School, St. Louis, Missouri (1999)
Ceramics Instructor: Edwardsville Arts Center (2003); Forest Park Community
College, St. Louis, Missouri (2001, 1998); Craft Alliance, St. Louis,
Missouri (1997-98); Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (1997)
SELECTED EXHIBITIONS
2003 Sixth Annual Invitational, Fifth Element Gallery, Portland, Oregon
30 x 5 Invitational, AKAR Gallery, Iowa City, Iowa
Holiday Exhibition, The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
NCECA Clay National, David Zapf Gallery, San Diego, California (Juror’s
Purchase Award)
Clayfest 2003, Cristel DeHaan Fine Arts Center Gallery, Indianapolis,
Indiana (Second Place Award)
Charity Davis-Woodard: Recent Work, The Gallery, Bloomington, Indiana
Snowbirds, Santa Fe Clay, Santa Fe, New Mexico
Forms and Shapes: CUP, Akar Gallery, Iowa City, Iowa
At Your Service 2003, Kreeger Gallery, Harwichport, Massachusetts
2002 Charity Davis-Woodard, solo exhibition, Xen Gallery, St. Louis, Missouri
For the Table, Santa Fe Clay, Santa Fe, New Mexico
National Teapot Show Five, Cedar Creek Gallery, Creedmoor, North Carolina
Biennial Ceramics Invitational, Parkland Art Gallery, Parkland College,
Champaign, Illinois
2001 Annual Strictly Functional Pottery National, Lancaster Museum of
Art, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Charity Davis-Woodard and Heather Galloway-Vickers, The Gallery, Bloomington,
Indiana
Southern Illinois Open Competition, Mitchell Museum at Cedarhurst, Mt.
Vernon, Illinois (Best of Clay Award)
Regional Ceramics Invitational, Guenzel Gallery, Peninsula Art School,
Fish Creek, Wisconsin
2000 Natural Materials, Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, Michigan
Focus On Function, Katherine E. Nash Gallery, University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis
Wood Fired 2000, Gallery 1021: Lill Street, Chicago, Illinois
Utilitarian Ceramics National, Nichols State University, Thibodaux, Louisiana
(Purchase Award)
The 2000 International Orton Cone Box Show, Baker University, Baldwin
City, Kansas (Juror’s Choice Award)
1999 Charity Davis-Woodard: Woodfired Pottery, solo exhibition, John Burroughs
School, St. Louis, Missouri
National Teapot Show IV, Cedar Creek Gallery, Creedmoor, North Carolina
Below 2000, Portland Center for Contemporary Craft, Portland, Oregon
Seventh Annual Strictly Functional Pottery National, Market House Craft
Center, E. Petersburg, Pennsylvania
Clayfest XI, Christel De Haan Fine Arts Center, University of Indianapolis,
Indianapolis, Indiana (Purchase Award)
Charity Davis-Woodard/Jane Everhart, The Gallery, Bloomington, Indiana
Clay Cup VII, University Museum, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale,
Illinois (Purchase Award)
1998 Tea or Poetry: Artists and the Teapot, Iowa Artisans Gallery, Iowa
City, Iowa
6th Annual Teapot Exhibition, Craft Alliance Gallery, St. Louis, Missouri
Women Who Fire with Wood, Andrews University Art Center Gallery, Berrien
Springs, Michigan
28th Annual Ceramics Invitational Exhibition, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
2003 The Studio Potter, vol. 31 no. 2, Goffstown, New Hampshire, p. 67.
2001 Hluch, K. The Art of Contemporary American Pottery, Krauss Publications,
Iola, Wisconsin. Pp. 44, 53, 141, 147.
“Charity Davis-Woodard,” Ceramics Monthly, vol. 49, no.9,
November, p. 14.
1998 “Put a Lid on It”, Ceramics Monthly, vol. 46, no. 9,
November, p. 44.
“Women Who Fire with Wood,” Ceramics Monthly, vol. 46, no.
8, October, p. 49.
SELECTED COLLECTIONS
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
Southern Illinois University Carbondale
University of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana
Nichols State University, Thibodaux, Louisiana