Mckeachie Johnston Studios
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Studio Ceramics


Randy J Johnston

Jan Mckeachie Johnston

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2024 Open Studio and Online Sale

This fall we are celebrating our 52nd year of pottery at this location!

Jan and I have fired our gas kiln several times and also fired our old and trusted large Nobori Gama wood-fired kiln .

We have an abundance of lovely high-fired pieces selected from these firings.

Our historic log showroom will be open weekends for personal visits. by appointment. Call or text 612-850-8089.

For our many out of area friends, pieces will be available online on our website: McKeachieJohnstonStudios.com.

 

Studio

Showroom

Kilns and Home

N 8336 690th ST

River Falls, WI 54022

Cell:R 612 850 8089 Cell: J 612-222-8102

email: randy.johnston@uwrf.edu

email: janmckeachie@gmail.com

 
 

Contact Us

Please add your contact information and your mailing address if you would like to receive mailed flyers for our Studio sales events.

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Our ceramics studio was established in 1972 with the idea of exploring the intersection between traditional pottery and modern art.

Today, people engaging in contemporary ceramics are rarely if ever anonymous folk artists; rather they are likely to be well educated, with a focused vision, striving to reveal their own artistic sensibilities. This is very different than historical ceramic production, in which objects  were often determined by the expectations and obligations of particular traditions.

Inviting someone to use a handmade ceramic piece is to open the possibility for a conversation, an exchange of ideas, or a shared experience with that person. Pots for everyday use have always had the potential to have a powerful autonomous presence and artistic meaning.

Between the Idea and Making

Firing our work in two large woodfired kilns, an Old Bizen style Nobori Gama and a traditional whale shaped Anagama, our work touches on the concepts of both modern and ancient art. We also fire a gas kiln with glazed wares. The work is rooted in the ceramic vessel traditions brought forward by the Japanese Mingei philosophies, while reflecting our interest in contemporary art.

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We make things as a way to manifest ideas. The idea might be as simple as a nice soup bowl or mug—or as complex as the intersection between traditional pottery and modern art. The work has specific modern connotations and attempts to deal with the development of the abstract within the utilitarian object aesthetic. Our pursuit is to enlarge the boundaries of conventional perceptions and enable new methods of communication and combination of forms.A functional pot also has the possibility to stand alone as a visual and artistic statement. Today, people engaging in contemporary ceramics are rarely if ever anonymous folk artists; rather they are likely to be well educated, with a focused vision, striving to reveal their own artistic sensibilities. Working as artists, we are engaged in tracking down a primary moment, a moment that reveals vulnerability, emotion, intellect, the conscious and subconscious.  Seeking to transform that moment into artistic creation is compelling.

 
 

Jan’s Image Gallery

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Randy’s Image Gallery

Follow us on Instagram

@janmckeachiejohnston

@randyjjohnston

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