go big

With no exhibits or big adventure plans on the docket these days, I’ve been keeping busy in the studio with mostly little projects and one BIG experiment. I figured that this is the best time to play and explore with out the worry of a deadline. So when I mentioned to my husband Nate that I wanted to try to make my hand-held-sized rock candy pieces big, like really big – he jumped on board to help me figure out how.

Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture | in the field | rock candy series

He came up with a contraption to help support the form and ultimately built one in wood first using the contraption as a support system for each of the panels. We rolled out thick slabs of clay, let them dry until they were stiff and then used the wood panels as templates for each plane of the new rock. We were able to get the whole thing together in a day, and while it’s got a few kinks that need to be worked out, it’s looking pretty good. This piece just barely fits in my kiln corner to corner, but I could go taller and still have it fit in the kiln, so we’re working on another template shape. I’m hoping that I can have a few different base forms that I can modify in the clay version so that they are all unique pieces in the end.

I also made a few medium sized pieces using paper templates. But I found that the paper models were too flexible and I ended up with slightly curved planes instead of flat ones. It’s a work in process, but I’m sure that I can figure out a way to make them this way too.

I’m hoping that the final forms could be used as unique low seating, as architectural elements in a garden, encrusted on a wall or even stacking them up like a totem with a steel rod on the inside, really the possibilities seem endless. But the real question is, what color should this first big baby be??

website updates!

If you have a website, you probably have a similar problem to me, maintaining it, keeping it fresh and at the same time consistent throughout. It may not look like a lot, but it’s days worth of work to create new pages, write content, format images just right and to get that one damn photo to nudge over when it just refuses to be centered. But with time on my hands these days, I’ve decided to attack this project a little at a time.

hive series | objects | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

I’ve found that I’ve got too much content in some area which makes it hard for viewers to find the work they are looking for or to share direct links to past pieces. To solve this, I’ve decided to break up some of the content heavy areas into new categories. It’s been fun going through older pages and revisiting work I hadn’t looked at in a long time! There are videos to watch on a number of the In the Field and Installations pages as well as behind the scenes installation photos. Here’s how it’s now organized…

If you click the portfolio tab on the main page, you can now see work listed as:

In the Field which are my ephemeral outdoor installations

Installations which is mainly gallery or museum exhibits

Objects which are generally smaller individual pieces

Public Art pieces which showcase any permanent or long term installations in public spaces

Collected Works which are selected works in clients homes

Works for Sale which will take you to the online Shop.

Originally, all of that content was on only three pages and you had to scroll through it all, so I hope that this makes it easier for viewers to find what they are looking for. I’ll still be tweaking, adjusting layouts and adding content so check back often to explore more of my works.

If you haven’t checked in on my website in awhile, please do and enjoy exploring!

relic series | objects | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

Sculpture IS: 2020

The one art event of the covid season that you can actually attend in person (with social distancing and a mask of course!) is PVAC’s Sculpture IS: 2020 at Sierra Azul Gardens in Watsonville. The exhibit opens July 1st and the garden will be filled with sculptures and is a wonderful place to stretch your legs as you cruise through the gardens.

relic series | objects | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

There will not be an opening reception this year for obvious reasons, but you can explore the show during normal business hours for Sierra Azul Nursery from July 1st – October 31st. I have 5 pieces from my Relic Series installed; they are ceramic rings tied with sinew and attached to slate bases. There are also just a few pieces from the Umbel Series hidden in the garden as well. Hope that you get a chance to check out my favorite show of the year!

new bespoke installation

I’m thrilled to share these snapshots of my newest Bone Series Installation for a private home. The entire home is beautifully custom designed and houses a huge collection of local artists work, I’m honored to have my work included in their collection.

The owners of this piece have been contemplating it for years before finally deciding to go for it. I think all their planning shows in how well it melts into the space, as if it’s always been there. It was designed to give multiple views as you approach the front of the house, or leave from the front door and also through the front windows while sipping tea from their kitchen table. It will be interesting to see how the morning light hits it, where the shadows will fall and how it will change through the seasons.

If you’ve been thinking about a custom installation for your home or garden, please contact me to start making it happen!

art + science workshop in taiwan

In the final weeks of my residency in Taiwan, the Yingge Ceramics Museum arranged for me to get a behind-the-scenes tour of the mycelium labs at the National Museum of Natural Sciences in Taichung – which was fascinating! In exchange, I gave a clay workshops for the staff of the science museum. The participants were staff and volunteers, most of whom had never played with clay, but who love science and nature.

We created small bowls that they carved into to create natural patterns and designs. All of the bowls were fired and glazed at the ceramics museum and then returned to the science museum. They just sent me photos of the all the bowls installed in their gorgeous greenhouse in a beautiful display of our ART + SCIENCE collaboration.

I’m so thrilled to see how thoughtfully they assembled these pieces into the landscape of their greenhouse. It was a wonderful experience to form this connection between the two museums and I’m grateful to them both for their willingness to accommodate my request to make this cultural exchange happen.

in the shop

Collaborative Trinket Necklaces | shop | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

Hey All!

Need of some inspiration while you’re still locked in at home?

The ONLINE SHOP is open!

Free Pick-Up in Santa Cruz Available!

Art + Computer Science

So many of you have complimented my website over the years and I can not take responsibility for it’s beauty and functionality, I owe that to Priscilla Cinque’s amazing talents. Her artful eye and incredible attention to detail has made mine and many others websites simply shine. And when something breaks (usually me touching something I shouldn’t of!), she’s the first one I contact to patiently help me fix it – seriously don’t know what I’d do without her!

So, when she FINALLY made a website for her own creative endeavors, I knew I needed to share it with y’all!

a sample from the ‘down to earth’ collection

Please follow the link below to explore the (of course!) beautifully designed brand new site that showcases Priscilla’s botanical illustrations, photo realistic objects and painstaking line drawings. As I have no patience or talent for creating this kind of detail, I am always impressed when I see these pieces emerge from her home studio. I’m so happy to see her sharing her artwork with everyone now. Please enjoy…

Priscilla Shih Cinque: meditations on form, color, light and shadow

week six – ephemeral art installations

This is the sixth and final (for now) week of ephemeral art installations in nature, which makes 30 installations in total! I’m sure that I’ll be making more of these in the future, but for now, we’ve decided to get back into our home base area of Santa Cruz so I can work on some commissioned pieces in the studio and we can check in with family and friends. I hope that you have enjoyed these pieces as I’ve been hiding out in our van in nature, it’s been really fun to make them!

death valley, california
death valley, california
sequoia national forest, california
sequoia national forest, california
sequoia national forest, california

Just a reminder, that I am not leaving any of these pieces out in nature. I’m not littering or impacting the environment, in fact all the above pieces were made with the same piece of clay I reclaimed each day. Hope you’re enjoying these fleeting installations and remember to pack your trash too!