Kurt Weiser


Kurt Weiser is an American ceramicist and professor. His work—explorations of the relationship between man and nature through narratives rendered in vivid color—are described as "Eden-like." His work has often taken the form of teapots, vases, and cups, though he has recently begun crafting globes as well. Weiser is currently the Regents Professor at Arizona State University's School of Art.

Education and career

Believing that their young son was spending too much time with "a bad crowd," Weiser's parents sent him to the Interlochen Arts Academy, a boarding school located in northern Michigan. He studied ceramics under Ken Ferguson at the Kansas City Art Institute, earning his BFA in 1972. He attended the University of Michigan to earn his MFA in 1976. Weiser also directed the Archie Bray Foundation in Helena, MT, from 1977-1988.
While at the Archie Bray Foundation, Weiser explored the possibilities of clay and focused on "somehow express the beautiful nature of the material." However, around the time of his departure, he had a significant conceptual breakthrough as he theorized that materials exist to allow artists to speak rather than to tell artists what they should speak. After he began teaching at Arizona State University, he started to delve into incorporating narrative scenes into his work.
His first foray into experimenting with surface design resulted in a teapot displaying botanical imagery rendered in black and white sgraffito. "Sgraffito," Italian for "to scratch," is a technique that involves applying color to a piece, and then scratching part of that layer off to reveal the clay beneath it. Soon, probably inspired by trips to Thailand, which boasts a colorful variety of plant life, Weiser began to incorporate china painting in his working methods, ultimately moving toward more complex narrative scenes. They highlighted the proximity of man and nature, exploring binaries that, he hoped, would elicit a feeling of unease from his audience: "order and chaos, growth and decay, life and death, strength and weakness."
Weiser's recent work has grown to include the form of world globes as well as teapots—although, in the spirit of continuing the trend of putting viewers on edge, these globes do not always represent the earth as it is commonly known and perceived. Instead, they venture into surreal or fantastic interpretations, oftentimes exploring, as his teapots do, scenes of collision between man and nature.

Artist statement

Weiser has stated:
The ideas and subjects of these paintings on the pots are for the most part just a collection of my own history of fantasy and view of reality. They are built the same way we dream: around a central idea, a cast of characters and environments just seem to show up to complete the picture.

Awards

Weiser has received the following awards:
Wesier is represented in the following museum collections:
Weiser's solo exhibitions around the U.S. include:
Weiser's work has been included in the following group exhibitions: