Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

'We can live in peace'...John Lennon (photo: Dafna Tal)

Mahzor

Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Beatrice Wood: One of America’s Greatest Potters & an American Original

beatrice wood--jewelled_hands

Wood at 105 with jewel bedecked hands (credit: Robert Hale)

One of the most exciting things about writing this blog is that I get to do what’s called in the Jewish liturgy, a chesbon nefesh (“personal accounting”), of the most important and meaningful events in my life. Then I can choose to write about them here in hopes that what moved me might move someone else as well.

In 1997, I decided to visit The American Craft Museum (now known as the Museum of Arts & Design). I have a bit of a love/hate relationship with the museum as I find some of the exhibits to be riveting and others to be dry as toast. But on this day, I happened upon its exhibition, Beatrice Wood: A Centennial Tribute. This was my introduction to the amazing pottery and even more amazing life of Beatrice Wood.

wood_young_girl

Wood: portrait of the artist as young girl

Wood, who died the next year in 1998 at the venerable age of 105, led a life that many of us would envy, full of great friendships with the intellectual and artistic giants of her era (including affairs with Duchamp and many others). She lived her life with grace and beauty right up to the end. Even more importantly, Wood produced some of her most important artistic work AFTER the age of 90. We should all be able to boast of such an achievement in our own lives!'Gilded Vessels'--buy it

Though Wood practiced many artistic forms, she will probably be best known for her ceramics. She perfected a style of pottery called lustre, which involved a gorgeous lustrous finish on her pieces that lent them a luminous, almost spiritual quality.

Besides being an extraordinary artist, she was a giving and devoted friend. Part of her charm and allure was her infallible and profound interest in everyone (especially attractive men!) who entered her orbit. She was an inveterate coquette and shameless flirt. One of her best known sayings was that “chocolate and young men” enabled her to reach her advanced age. If one wished to visit her, the ultimate passport was chocolate. No chocolate, no visit (perhaps a slight exagerration).wood_gilded_vessel_book_jkt

Alexandra Anderson-Spivy in Longevity’s Paradoxes and Rewards: Beatrice Wood attempted to place Wood, her art and her life into their social context (this was written while Wood was alive):

Wood is a fascinating cultural hybrid whose art reflects the her immersion in classic European and American modernism. She first studied painting at the Academie Julien, and was a handmaiden to Dada. Another part of the mix included the high intellectual bohemianism of New York in the twenties (when Duchamp was her lover and mentor), the theosophists of Southern California, the influence of India, and her studies with the pioneering California potters Glen Lukens and the great Otto and Gertrude Natzler. Wood is a reigning art pottery star. But Wood’s artistic achievement must never again be segregated within the world of craft alone. It now belongs to, and enriches the larger story of twentieth century modern art.

On the occasion of the American Craft Museum’s tribute, Craft Report wrote Tribute Honors Beatrice Wood at Age 104 the following appreciation which also provides further background on Wood’s life and artistic career:

Wood broke rank with social and familial expectations and opted for a career as an actress in pre-World War I Paris. Her career as a visual artist began in Paris when she enrolled in drawing classes in 1910, at age 17. At the outbreak of World War I, she left Paris for New York, where, in 1916, she met Marcel Duchamp.'I Shock Myself'--buy it

She was a well-known member of the New York Dada Circle, which included such figures as Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray. Many believe that the love triangle that developed among Wood, Duchamp and French Diplomat Henri-Pierre Roché formed the basis of Roché’s novel, Jules and Jim, which was later made into the celebrated film by François Truffaut.

Wood did not begin her career in ceramics until 1933, at the age of 40. By fusing experimental glazes with simple, universal forms, Wood’s iridescent luster vessels soon established her international reputation. Wood’s ceramics differ from most of the luster tradition that preceded her. Earlier, luster had primarily been used for surface decoration of forms that had already been glazed. Wood on the other hand, worked chiefly with in-glaze luster, produced during a single glaze firing, bringing to it her own sensibility of theatricality and adventurousness.

Wood was perhaps one of the earliest feminists and led a liberated and invigorating sex life. Frances Naumann, who curated the Craft Museum’s tribute to Wood, included this amazing Wood comment on her love life with Duchamp in Enough Is Enough Is Enough:

When I once asked Beatrice Wood how Marcel was in bed, fearing that I would never forgive myself in the future for not having asked that question (impertinent though it certainly was), she responded with a tribute that would be the envy of any sensitive and caring man: “All I can remember is that he was as gentle in bed,” she said, “as he was out of it.”

One of her other pithy comments was: “I loved seven men I didn’t marry and married two men I never loved.”

James Cameron came to know Wood and asked her if he could interview her because he wanted to write a character in his film, Titanic, that would be based on her life. The result was the memorable Gloria Stuart charcter, Rose.

No one who knew her seemed to feel anything less than outright admiration for her. One fan who knew Wood wrote this about her: “Beato’ welcomed everyone through the door to her studio, her heart was always open.” Another admirer wrote:

Beatrice Wood’s home, life and heart were filled to the brim with love and art. Not a space was left without adornment and laughter. Each moment was expressed in creative and mischievous joy tweaking the nose of anyone who might be the least bit conservative or without humor; she enjoyed telling people
her two primary loves were young men and chocolate.

This artistic appraisal by Bernadette Finnerty captures her technique and style succinctly:

Wood was noted for pioneering exquisite “luster” glazes in luminous colors including dark green, gold, pink and blue. Her work was noted for its social commentary, often poking fun at political hypocrisy and the battle of the sexes.

The Garth Clark Gallery, which represented Wood, maintains some great archival material and articles about Wood, including an excerpt from Frances Nauman’s introduction in Gilded Vessels.

The Smithsonian Archives of American Art offers a Beatrice Wood oral history recorded in 1976.

Beatrice Wood’s Studio is maintained by an educational foundation she established. The website offers many of her pieces for sale and provides some interesting links and resources about the artist.

Here is a gallery of some of the finest Wood ceramics, jewelry and sculpture I could find on the web. The images are from Garth Clark Gallery/Beatrice Wood: Gilded Vessels, Beatrice Wood’s Studio, and Guild.com.


wood_bluebowl wood_green_cup red_cup_
wood_red_cup_ woodlavender_ wood_superior_masc_mind
wood_red_gold_lustre_cup_garth_clark wood_gold_vase wood_orange_beaded_necklacegarth_clark_site
wood_bluevase turquoise_bowl_


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One Response to “Beatrice Wood: One of America’s Greatest Potters & an American Original”

  1. [...] July 28 Dada or Our Daddy of avant garde – did not think we should own cars. He has a reputation of being controversial, and uncompromising but for me he was a great teacher who fused art and life, he represents good sense, sanity and humor. I happen to think many of his paintings beautiful and mysterious for someone who disdained the retinal in favor of concept. “When I once asked Beatrice Wood how Marcel was in bed, fearing that I would never forgive myself in the future for not having asked that question (impertinent though it certainly was), she responded with a tribute that would be the envy of any sensitive and caring man: “All I can remember is that he was as gentle in bed,” she said, “as he was out of it.” ( from here). See “Jules and Jim” by Francois Truffaut a film vaguely influenced by Henri Pierre Roche’ friendship with Marcel. (The information about Roche came from Pauline Kael. According to Pauline Kael, Roche introduced Picasso to Gertrude Stein). Jim seems like a model for both Henri and Marcel. Who was Jules? Eggnudes Descending the Stairs was dedicated to him, anyone care to celebrate his birthday? [...]

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