share photo
Pine-Mills-Pottery  > Daphne Roehr Hatcher > Daphne in the Studio
Daphne shares her studio, Pine Mills Pottery, with her husband, Gary C. Hatcher. While they share the same clays, glazes and kilns, each work independently of the other. Daphne primarily handbuilds, often with clay she has taken into the surrounding forests and textured with tree bark. Daphne fires a 45 cubic foot propane-fired kiln and a 120 cubic foot wood-fired Bourry Box kiln, both in reduction to cone 12.
Gallery pages:  <  1  2  3  4  
< Prev 55 of 60 Next >
Pine-Mills-Pottery > After the kiln has cooled for 2-3 days, the door is opened and the pots can be unloaded.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Pots fresh from the firing.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Pots fresh from the firing.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Pots fresh from the firing.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > The Texas landscape far beyond the woodlands surrounding Pine Mills pottery inspires Daphne as well.  This is the Rio Grande, the United States border between Texas and Mexico.  The whole concept of boundaries and borderlines intrigues Daphne at this time: what constitutes a border, why does it exist, is it flexible and can it be pushed, or is it a rigid wall that one only butts one&#8217;s head against?
Pine-Mills-Pottery > "Boundary" platter.
Daphne's platters are available in four sizes:  7-8", 11-12", 15" and 18-20".
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Light streaming through giant bamboo to the forest floor below creates shadow and light.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Bamboo and sunlight.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > The leaves of this forest fern create a pattern of light and dark.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Daphne Hatcher's designs often reflect the environment she surrounds herself with.  Forest colors of chartreuse, green and brown find their way into her patterns and shapes.  Shadow and light are recurrent themes in her work.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > The east Texas forests are rich with diversity.  Mixed hardwoods, pines, dogwood, holly and other shrubby trees tower over a wide variety of ferns and other shade-loving native plants.  Along the water's edge one finds cattails, rushes and marsh grasses.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Exhibition of Gary and Daphne Hatcher's ceramic art at Goldesberry Gallery in Houston, Texas.
Mushroom-inspired platters in the background.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Exhibition of Gary and Daphne Hatcher's ceramic art at Goldesberry Gallery in Houston, Texas.
Poppy platter and one of Daphne's "boundary" platters in the background.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Exhibition of Gary and Daphne Hatcher's ceramic art at Goldesberry Gallery in Houston, Texas.
The rippling water of the Hatcher's pond when a few raindrops had just began to fall inspired these platters.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Exhibition of Gary and Daphne Hatcher's ceramic art at Goldesberry Gallery in Houston, Texas.
One of Daphne's "claygardens" in the background.
Daphne Hatcher's designs often reflect the environment she surrounds herself with. Forest colors of chartreuse, green and brown find their way into her patterns and shapes. Shadow and light are recurrent themes in her work.
Pine-Mills-Pottery > Daphne Hatcher's designs often reflect the environment she surrounds herself with.  Forest colors of chartreuse, green and brown find their way into her patterns and shapes.  Shadow and light are recurrent themes in her work.
Daphne Hatcher's designs often reflect the environment she surrounds herself with. Forest colors of chartreuse, green and brown find their way into her patterns and shapes. Shadow and light are recurrent themes in her work.
Other sizes: S · Medium · L |
Share photo: links, forums, blogs |
Keywords: shadow light working chartreuse drh
Gallery pages:  <  1  2  3  4  
< Prev 55 of 60 Next >

Comments

| hide gallery comments |

New comment:

Comment on: | Rating: stars
Name:
Link:
To foil spammers, enter this code: copy this text in this box: Code unreadable?
Powered by SmugMug | Login | Shopping Cart | Portions © 2008 SmugMug, Inc.
Show FeedsAvailable Feeds | What are feeds?
gallery photos:
Atom FeedAtom | RSS FeedRSS