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FACE JUG Pottery Art--Homeless, Beggar, Tramp--by Mahlke--The Yankee Potter
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FACE JUG Pottery Art--Homeless, Beggar, Tramp--by Mahlke--The Yankee Potter
Price: US $563.00

\"They are but beggars that can count their worth!\"

That Billy Shakes is always right. I think this is why I like selling on ; I just can\'t ever seem to count my own worth. Actually, this pot was not inspired by anything penned by the Bard. Rather, I recently found the stunning photography of Lee Jeffries. Below are some of his amazing photos.

Good, right? So below are some photos of the jug his amazing photographs inspired.

Jeffries\'s portraits presented faces so full of character that I really had to dig deep to capture the experience, texture, and lumps of life lived on the streets. This fella\'s wide-set eyes are lined and caked in grime. Experience. Fatigue. But none of the cruelty or suspicious street smarts that look to lead you down a dark alley and dash out your wits. A little on the swarthy side. Gash to the lip. Evidence of a once broken beak. Wretched wooly cap full of dubious stains. Hand-rolled cigarette slowly crawling back to that one sad remaining tooth.

The jug was turned on the wheel in two pieces. The first was the form for the jug/face. I then turned the wool cap as a second piece and added it later. The jug is faced from the inside out to reduce the weight and add detail. The glazes are all home made. This jug is 10\" tall by around 10\" from peak of nose to tip of spout/neck. It is signed and dated. It is in mint or perfect condition.

I am a high school English teacher. For the past few years I have had my twelfth graders work on a project in the last quarter where they have to teach themselves something new--a new skill? Hobby? Trade? The sky is the limit. This year I decided I would share with them something that I taught myself about six years ago--pottery. I made a 60 second video on YouTube showing how I turn that glob of goo into a face jug.

A year or so ago I was contacted by writer/director Chad Crawford Kinkle, who had just won Slamdance\'s top prize for best horror script, to make around 20 face jugs for his film. The film is currently scaring the pants off of viewers in festivals here and abroad. News is that it was just picked up by a distributor, so start looking for it around July. I included a still and a shot of the new poster to show my pots acting their scariest.

To see more, please check out my website. Google: theyankeepotter.

Thanks for looking.Who made this?
My name is Jason Mahlke, and I am a self taught potter. I turn the pots in my basement, create thefaces at my kitchen table, and fire them in my garage. I admire theSouthern potters like the Meaders and Hewell families. Their pottery always features such solid,graceful forms with crude but expressive faces. But I am also drawn to thesophisticated and lifelike looks of some of Wallace Martin\'s face jugsand grotesques. I think I\'m beginning to get close to capturing thatsort of impossible balance. I mainly use Georgia clay because of its heavy grog. This gives the jars the sandy texture that you would find inthe Southern stoneware. I make jugs, jars, coffee cups, salt & pepper holders...pretty much anything that can serve as some sort of container.


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