Potter's
Vitae

In
this lifetime, Mary Flodin began to study the potter's craft as a child,
at the studio of Dora de Larios, in Los Angeles, California. She pursued
her study and practice at Mills College, under the great Prieto, and at
U.C. Irvine under architectural sculptor John Mason. At the University
of California, Santa Cruz, from 1976 to 1978, Mary underwent
a rigorous apprentice-style Bachelor of Arts program in California Craftsman-style
Ceramic Art, under master potter/painter, Al Johnsen, graduating with
Honors in the Major. At this time, she made pilgrimages to the studios
of legends-in-their-own-time master potters Bernard Leach in Cornwall,
England, and Bauhaus potter Marguerite Wildenhain, on the Russian River
in Guerneville, California. She also studied at U.S.C. ISOMATA, Idyllwild
School of the Arts with Susan
Peterson, biographer of the great Pueblo
Indian Potter, Maria of San Ildefonso, and with Acoma master potter,
Lucy Lewis.
In
1979, Mary journeyed to the isle of Crete, where she apprenticed to a
traditional potter. Her photo essay documenting this potter's work was
the featured cover story in the October, 1980, issue of Ceramics Monthly
Magazine. In the summer of 1999, Mary apprenticed in the traditional pottery
village of Mashiko, Japan, home of the great Shoji Hamada, Living National
Treasure. She documented her experience living and working in a 500 year
old Edo farmhouse with a group of Shinto priests, in the potter's compound
of Sensei Furuki, in an article published in the February, 2000 issue
of Ceramics Monthly Magazine.
In
1978, Mary opened shop as an independent studio potter, at Bluebird Creek
Pottery in Santa Cruz, California. Her porcelain, carved celedon, and
stoneware work has been sold by Gumps of San Francisco, and by fine arts
galleries in Santa Cruz, Monterey, and Murphys, California. Her work resides
in private collections in the United States, Japan, and Europe.
Mary
has been teaching the potter's craft since 1976. She was the managing
instructor of the Merrill College Pottery Co-op, University of California
at Santa Cruz, from 1976 to 1985. From 1980 to 1985, Mary was a Spectra
Artist-in-the-Schools, working for the Santa Cruz Cultural Council. In
the summer of 1988, Mary served as Potter in Residence at Holden Village,
a Lutheran spiritual community on Lake Chellan in Washington State.
Mary
has participated in a number of community arts projects, including the
Lifeyard Peace Sculpture Project on the San Lorenzo River in Santa Cruz
in the 1980's. In 1982, Mary was invited to take part in a Kirlian photography
project, pictorially documenting the energy fields of potters working
with clay. The project, by artist/medical scientist Minna Hertel, resulted
in a stunning and astounding show in Capitola, California, revealing the
hidden auras of humans and the materials they contact, and in an essay
by Mary, published in the February, 1983 issue of Ceramics Monthly Magazine.
This introduction to Kirlian photography led Mary to begin her exploration
into the physics and metaphysics of biotic energy fields.
At
this time, Bluebird Creek Pottery produces a full line of functional porcelain
kitchenware, vases, and lamps, as well as stoneware and earthenware fountains,
flower pots, and small votive sculptures for the garden. The potter views
her work with clay as a spiritual and healing act of communion and joy
- liberating, soothing, balancing, elevating and purifying body, mind,
and creative spirit.

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