|
|
Jason grew up in
that part of Colorado that connects the mountains to the desert. His
visual art influences range from Southwestern native pottery to album
cover art, though nature is his largest influence and inspiration. He
spent time in the summers hiking and rafting the canyons, and winters
skiing the high country. The sandstone formations of the Western
Colorado desert, ripples in the sand, tracks made by insects, patterns
found in snake scales, oil sheen on water, decomposing plant material -
these things have always given him a desire to create.
|
| His music has been
inspired by natural elements as well - the call of a canyon wren, the
sizzle of wind through high tension wires, the pounding sound of surf.
All kinds of traditional music have been major influences as well -
from classical to psychedelic to world folk music to drum circles
around campfires. |
| He began playing
trumpet in grade school and has continued through the present. In the
1980's he began learning techniques on the hand drum and the open holed
flute, and by the early 1990's he was learning to play the didjeridu.
From 1998 - 2000 he performed and recorded with an alternative band
called Sly
Baba, playing trumpet, concert flute, didgeridoo, the Indian sanai,
and various percussion instruments. He has recently recorded trumpet
and didgeridoo parts professionally for a local jazz musician. He has
combined his love for the trumpet and other lip buzzing instruments
with his skill and craftsmanship in ceramics. |
Jason
at the wood fired kiln at Delphinia
|
| His new array of
work includes many whimsical and musically functional bugles and
didjeridus. Some of his pieces are included in a book entitled From Mud to Music,
which will be published by the American Ceramic Society next year. |
 |
Jason was
fortunate to be encouraged from a very young age in ceramics; skill
with clay came naturally. When he was five he
formed a giraffe that still sits in his grandparents house. His father
taught pottery to elementary school students. He remembers his father
taking him to the elementary school in the evenings to turn up the kiln
and show him glass melting into glaze. In high school he was awarded
"Best of Show" for a figurative ceramic piece he did. In his first two
years at a Mesa State College in Colorado he studied under an
accomplished professional potter, Lavern Mosher. Mosher taught by
example, throwing large pieces with great skill, speed and accuracy.
Mosher's assistant, Susan Rose, taught more slowly and methodically,
helping beginners to see her technique clearly. |
| From them Jason
learned throwing, sculpture technique, and the vocabulary of ceramics.
Jason was hypnotized by the wheel, and enjoyed the malleability of
plastic clay, finding that it lent itself well to free expression. His
teachers recognized Jason's interest, and one of them showed him a
secret method of leaving a pebble in the studio door catch, to ensure
unlocked, late-night access. The door appeared to be closed, and this
would go unnoticed by the night janitors, so that he could have extra
practice time at night. There he experimented making his first ceramic
drums. |
He moved to
Olympia, WA in 1991 to finish his Bachelor of Arts at Evergreen State
College with an emphasis in sculpture and acoustics. He pursued the
sculpture emphasis in non-ceramic mediums; in his first two years in
the northwest he had no access to the school pottery studio due to full
classes and closing for reconstruction. He began using available open
studio space wherever he could find it. In Colorado he had used red
clay in the gas-fired reduction kiln, which caused the iron in the clay
to flash nicely; in the Northwest he switched to using white stoneware
because it lent itself to more interesting oxidation glazes, which was
his only option with his electric kiln. After finishing school he spent
several months in India; he was fascinated and inspired by the exotic
images he found there. He returned to Olympia and began building his
own ceramics studio. In 1998 he began work on a tunnel style
wood-burning kiln. Working with two other artists, the kiln was
completed in just over a year. The kiln has now been in operation for
over three years. "The chaotic nature of wood firing and the use of
natural materials allow an interplay of control and chance and help to
build an earthy, subtle aesthetic. This subtlety is the foundation of
inspiration." Jason teaches one on one in his studio in free form
style, paying attention to the student's ability level. He is a
founding member of the Olympia Clayworks Cooperative.
|
|
|