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The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
The Morris Gallery Ken Vavrek
Recent Wall Sculpture
July 8 through August 21, 1983
The very face of the land is called to mind in Ken Vavrek's recent
wall sculpture. Expanses of slab-built clay position themselves
like shifting earth plates. With active gestures and subtle color,
Vavrek marks the surface and contour of each compositional element.
Pocked, scratched and strafed by the artist, the clay may read as
bark, shell or soil. Smoother segments undulate like sand dunes
and offer visual islands of repose. Ochre, acqua and mauve may pool
power to pull us into unexpected harmonies.
While they make reference to landscape forms, these deep reliefs are essentially abstract configurations. Vavrek works with a high-temperature stoneware clay, first applying high-fire soft-toned glazes, and then brushing on the low-fire brighter colors. The pieces are fired a minimum of three times and it is not unusual for Vavrek to go on to five firings to correct and balance the coloration. Judith Stein
Morris Gallery Coordinator
Artist Statement
Thrusting desert mountains have shapes, forms, and surfaces that
directly relate to my experiences in pushing clay around. My urban
environment stands in high contrast to the intense absence of man
in those western spaces. My mind is energized by this disparity.
Shards, obliterated foundations, and strange fossils in the desert
coupled with the tops of buildings, billboards, various architectural
structures, and oblique intersections in the city are among the
things that shape my art.
In addition to these exterior concerns I try to remain faithful to the material and to some degree expose the process of constructing the forms. Looking back I find these internal involvements help reveal a sense of strength, vulnerability, space, and time. And it's not irrelevant that I'm interested in the way cloud shadows enhance a sunny day.
Ken Vavrek
June,1983
Checklist
All sculptures are fired stoneware clay with high - and low - temperature glazes. All dimensions are in inches, height preceding width and depth. 1. Strong Hold,
1983
30 x 6-1/2 x 11
Lent by Peter and Ellen
Lullemann
2. Easy Breach,
1982
27 x 69 x 11-1/2
Lent by Bertram and Barbara Horowitz
3. Rough Break,
1981
28 1/2 x 42 x 8-3/4
4. Rough and
Ready, 1982
66 x 56 x 12-1/2
5. Passage,
1983
55 x 156 x 14 6. Whipper Snapper,
1983
61 x 107 x 14-1/2 7. Close Order,
1981
18-1/2 x 39-1/2 x 10
8. Crossed
Wind, 1982
11 x 37-1/2 x 7-1/4
9. Riders,
1981
14-3/4 x 40 x 8-1/2
Ken Vavrek was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1939. He received
both his B.F.A. (1963) and his M.F.A. (1965) degrees from Ohio University.
A Professor of Art at Moore College since 1970, Vavrek is the recipient
of a Craftsmen's Fellowship from the National Endowment for the
Arts (1977) and a Fellowship in Crafts from the Pennsylvania Council
on the Arts (1983). He is a co-founder and board member of The Clay
Studio, Philadelphia. Vavrek has conducted workshops at Haystack Mountain School of
Crafts, Deer Isle, Me. (1972); the International Ceramics Symposium,
Memphis Academy of Arts (1973); and Peter's Valley Crafts Center,
Layton, N.J. (1981). His work is included in the collections of
the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Milwaukee Art Center, the Kalamazoo
Institute of Arts, and the private collections of R. Joseph Monsen,
Seattle, Washington, and Ben Short, New York, NY.
Bibliography
"Ken Vavrek's Wall Sculpture," Ceramics Monthly (March
1983), pp. 34-35.
Sid Sachs, "Kenneth Vavrek," American Ceramics
(1983, no. 1), pp. 70-71.
The Morris Gallery displays the work of outstanding contemporary
artists with a connection to Philadelphia, determined by birth,
schooling or residence. The exhibitions are chosen by a committee
composed of area artists, museum personnel and collectors, and the
curatorial staff of the Academy. Currently serving on the Morris
Gallery Exhibition Committee are: Murray Dessner, Anne d'Harnoncourt,
Jennie Q. Dietrich, Harold Jacobs, Janet Kardon, Charles Mather
III, Dr. Perry Ottenberg, David Pease, Jody Pinto, Acey Wolgin;
and Academy staff Frank Goodyear, Kathy Foster, Linda Bantel, Judith
Stein.
Copyright Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1983
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