If I sat down and tried to count all the talented people that I’ve met in my life, my mind would probably implode. And yet still, I find more artists to admire, more hands to watch. As I move through different stages in my creative career, I find that there is always someone riding alongside me, just ahead of me, or right behind me. We’re all connected and relate to one another through some form of aspiration or insecurity. This instant bond over “figuring it out” is key to moving forward.

You may have noticed that some of these interviews are termed “creative maker” and some are termed “creative master”. What makes someone a master versus a maker? For me, these two terms are very fluid and subjective. I don’t know if any artists I could relate to consider themselves masters. If they did, they probably wouldn’t be moving forward. For me, a master is someone who is sure in their practice, sure in their voice, and sure in the goals they set before them. By now, all the Creative Makers I’ve featured are probably now Creative Masters.

I fell in love with Rachel’s forms before I met her in person. Over last year’s holiday season, I picked up a porcelain mug at Crafted Westside and my cabinet was then forever changed. It was smooth, elegant, and easy to hold, the perfect size. I had to have it. Not long after, I found out that Rachel was actually a mutual friend. It was then that I realized the universe was telling me that I had to meet this woman. Well.. I ended up meeting her and the time I spent with her was everything I anticipated it to be. When you connect with someone’s work, you are ultimately connecting with them as a person. So obviously, I knew I was going to like her. 

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Can you describe the earliest memory you have working with clay?

It was second grade–we had Art class once a week, on Friday afternoons. I sculpted a whale out of clay and, just as I was instructed, I hollowed out the inside so that be wouldn’t blow up in the kiln. After a long week of waiting, he emerged from the bisk with a giant crack extending in both directions from his blow hole. Mrs. Rosetti suggested that I fill in the crack with glaze. That seemed like a good idea, so I selected the glaze called “blue-speckled gray” because, naturally, that was the best fit for my whale. I kept filling and filling and filling that crack with the blue-speckled gray glaze but the crack just kept absorbing and absorbing and absorbing the glaze. I did the best I could and put it on the cart with the others. The next week, I met my freshly fired whale, who was now indeed a beautiful shade of blue-speckled gray, with a crack extending in both directions from his blow hole. To this day, he lives on a shelf in the closet of my old bedroom in my parents’ house.

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What do you love about porcelain and why do you continue to work with it as your preferred medium?

So many things….it’s as though porcelain is this other material which lies somewhere between clay and glass. We treat it like clay when we manipulate it in its raw form, but when embraced by the fire, it begins to dance in the fluid realm of molten glass. And when it emerges, it contains luminescence. It is not transparent like glass, but it lets the light through and it glows. When vitrified, a sanded surface becomes as smooth as skin–such a pleasure to touch, to hold, to place to the lips and take a sip… In the process of slip casting, there is a certain predictability–when the porcelain is released from the mold, the form will be that of the hollow space of the mold. However, once turned over to the kiln, the porcelain may shift and transform in unexpected ways. It maintains mystery in that way. Porcelain also contains the paradox of extreme fragility and ultimate strength–it can be the finest teacup, locked safely in a cupboard, pulled out for only the most special occasion, and, if dropped, will shatter into a million pieces. It is also rugged and durable–a toilet that we sit on or floor tiles that we walk all over. And it is everything in between–it’s all in a matter of how we approach it, and what qualities we choose to expose.

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Who is your favorite functional potter? And your favorite conceptual artist?

This is really hard, so I’m just going to share the first that come to mind, and I’m going to name one man and one woman for each…Mark Shapiro and Gwendolyn Yoppolo. Anna Schuleit and Tomas Saraceno.

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What about insects fascinates you?

It’s more like “what about insects doesn’t fascinate me!?”  They have so many legs. They fly. They are tiny yet covered in amazing intricate patterns that have evolved as methods of protection. They wear armor on the inside. They wear armor on the outside. They wrap themselves up, turn into a pile of goo, and then reform and emerge in an entirely new body. They build webs and nests and dig tunnels. They shed their outer layers and leave a ghost of themselves behind. They are essential to the survival and reproduction of plants. And, as a result, essential to our survival.

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How do you want people to feel when they experience your work? What is it “about”?

Mostly, I simply want people to feel. I want them to pause long enough to experience their own emotions. I want to provide opportunity for them to sit with the bright warmth of the material and feel like they can stop and breathe for a moment. It’s about an honesty. I hold the notion that if I am truly honest in my process and in my intentions of translating my thoughts and experiences, that will come through in the work. Not necessarily as directly as telling a story, but more in the way of setting emotion into object and environment almost like a mirror to reflect people’s stories back to themselves. Does that make sense?

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What’s been the most difficult challenge you faced in becoming an artist? How did you overcome it? 

Convincing my parents that it is possible. It’s a work in progress.

Fill in the blank.

In 5 years, my work will be bigger. In 10 years, my work will be even bigger still.

What brought you to Atlanta and what do you love about it so far?

Most of all, I love how much this city can feel like a small town.

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Where are some of your favorite ATL spots?

Well, the Goat Farm is an obvious one…it’s an oasis to me–a continually inspiring community of folks tucked into this amazing old architecture. I love my neighborhood coffee shop–Taproom Coffee in Kirkwood–the perfect place to sit with an almond milk latte and my laptop and bust out some work. I recently started going to classes at All Life is Yoga in Inman Park. I immediately felt a warm welcome from the teachers and other students and like my presence in class really mattered. Also, Lifecycle Building Center, a non-profit organization that diverts usable building materials from landfills toward opportunities for reuse. Almost all of my studio furniture came from there. In addition to that, they are supporters of the arts. The first time I ever went there was to see a production of Moby Dick that was performed inside their warehouse space. And Adam gave me access to a really cool section of railroad tracks to stage and photograph some of my large porcelain forms.

If you could travel back in time and tell your 21-year old self one thing, what would you say?

I love you. Keep walking forward and I’ll see you in a dozen years.

www.rachelkgarceau.com

3 Comments

  1. I am also an admirer of Rachel’s work and a wannabe yoga practitioner. I really loved this article and feel so thankful right now for how surrounded my life is by art. I think your article captured a true slice of the artist and the photos are great too.

    • I never got a chance to thank you for your comment. If any of these interviews resonate with even just one person (other than myself), then it’s totally worth it. If you know of anyone else I should check out please do let me know!

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