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        <title>Eric Knoche Studio</title>
        <description><![CDATA[Eric Knoche Studio articles]]></description>
        <link>http://www.ericknoche.com</link>
        <lastBuildDate>Fri, 30 Dec 2011 10:53:15</lastBuildDate>
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            <title>Between Bones and Words.</title>
            <link>http://www.ericknoche.com/?section=news&amp;article=25</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p>
	A solo exhibition of new ceramic work at Anderson O&#39;brien Fine Art, Omaha Nebraska.&nbsp; Fall 2011.</p>
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            <pubDate>Fri, 30 Dec 2011 17:52:40</pubDate>
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            <title>Eric Knoche in Ceramics Monthly</title>
            <link>http://www.ericknoche.com/?section=news&amp;article=24</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p>
	This is an article published in the May issue of Ceramics Monthly.&nbsp; The PDF appears courtesy of Ceramic Montly.&nbsp; Please visit their website at <a href=\"http://www.ceramicsmonthly.org/\">www.ceramicsmonthly.org/</a></p>
<p>
	&nbsp;</p>
<p>
	Because the text of the article is a bit difficult to read, I have included a text only version below.</p>
<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><p>
	Eric Knoche: Points of Connection<br />
	Katey Schultz<br />
	<br />
	My conversations with Eric Knoche began with a fairly straightforward intention: I wanted to understand how the artist&rsquo;s multiple bodies of work informed and enhanced each other. I had a hunch that each served as a distinct study of formal concepts, and that when viewed as a whole, these bodies of work would reveal Knoche&rsquo;s style. To a certain extent, that seemed true enough. But perhaps more important was the discovery that Knoche&rsquo;s bodies of work act as stepping stones for both the artist&rsquo;s creative process and the viewer&rsquo;s unique experience.<br />
	<br />
	With hints of influence from the Japanese Bizen tradition, Scandinavian design, and adobe architecture, Knoche currently uses sparse but natural ash glazes across gritty, natural surfaces to make work ranging from hand-held to human-sized. The forms are loosely geometric and often exhibited in multiples, inviting the viewer to touch, arrange, or play with the pieces. Based on his website&mdash;which provides images of vessels, platters, sculptures, large works, and installations&mdash;I asked the artist if it was accurate to say he produces five bodies of work. &ldquo;It would be more accurate to generate a mind map with thicker or thinner lines showing the connections between various series,&rdquo; Knoche said. &ldquo;To me, it is really one body of work.&rdquo;<br />
	<br />
	Interestingly enough, it was this connection that mattered more than distinguishing the work into separate bodies. From the outset, Knoche has been a process-oriented artist. In 2004, he apprenticed with New York ceramicist Jeff Shapiro for two years. From 2008-09, he spent half a year in Japan through the Asian Cultural Council apprenticing with Isezaki Jun, a Living National Treasure. &ldquo;Initially, I was hesitant to subordinate my own creative drives to someone else,&rdquo; said Knoche. &ldquo;But I took stock&hellip;and I realized that it would be really helpful to see how everything relates. I wanted to learn how the business side and the artistic side interact, how studio life and home life connect, how a professional artist spends their day, minute to minute.&rdquo; For Knoche, apprenticing was more about how to live like an artist, not how to technically construct something artistic. He came away from both experiences with role models for life. &ldquo;I was really taken by how involved [Jeff Shapiro&rsquo;s] whole family was. His wife, for example, doesn&rsquo;t really make pots, but is a master at firing the wood kiln and an expert chef. I learned a lot from her too.&rdquo; Likewise, in Japan, Knoche was interested in Isezaki&rsquo;s process before the actual making.<br />
	<br />
	Knoche&rsquo;s vessels and platters serve as the first point of connection in his creative process. &ldquo;I use them to explore special relationships between curves, planes, and angles. They are very grounding for me,&rdquo; he said. Although made singularly, he almost always displays the pieces in concert with one another, waiting until after a firing to see which forms sit well together depending on surface design and shape. Most vessels stand between eight and sixteen inches high and four to ten inches across, with platters ranging between twenty to thirty inches. When venturing toward a new form entirely, Knoche likes &ldquo;starting from the place of certainty&rdquo; that this work affords because of its functionality&mdash;the vessels stand upright with an opening to suggest a vase or container and the platters meet the basic criteria. Viewers, likewise, can find an immediate point of connection through this functionality even though the works&rsquo; predominate feature is the sculptural shapes rather than the potential physical &ldquo;use.&rdquo;<br />
	<br />
	Knoche&rsquo;s second way of engaging his creative process happens as he constructs what he calls sculptures and larger works. These expand on formal concepts evident in the vessels and platters, but traditional functionality is a distant echo. The sculptures are stackable, puzzle-pieced hollow forms clearly made by the same hand, begging the viewer to step a little further from the comfort zone and into the realm of physical interaction. The pieces of Knoche&rsquo;s &ldquo;Arch Puzzles&rdquo; can be picked up, restacked, or mixed and matched. Works such as &ldquo;Ribcage&rdquo; and &ldquo;Untitled Puzzle&rdquo; can be aligned to form what looks like one solid form out of three, four, five, or even more separate pieces.<br />
	<br />
	Equally as interactive, Knoche&rsquo;s larger work is too cumbersome to pick up and move, but still manages to push the viewer out of the comfort zone using the temptation of interaction. &ldquo;There is something special that happens when forms approach human size. I&rsquo;m curious about this and&hellip;the larger works are a way for me to explore the way my work affects the space around it,&rdquo; says Knoche. Indeed, what&rsquo;s affected isn&rsquo;t just the external space, because the human-sized forms in dance-like postures provide an internal conceptual experience for viewers as well.<br />
	<br />
	Employing all of his explorations&mdash;from the vessels and platters, through the sculptures and larger works&mdash;Knoche&rsquo;s affinity for process comes to fruition in the final point of connection to his creative process: installations. Work such as &ldquo;Aurora&rdquo; or &ldquo;Untitled Expansion No. 1&rdquo; are less about form or size and more about surface and arrangement. &ldquo;With these, I am exploring how the different surface effects combine in sequences to create something entirely other,&rdquo; says Knoche. &ldquo;My hope is that the whole, including the white space, transcends the individual blocks on the wall.&rdquo;<br />
	<br />
	Like many artists who have apprenticed, Knoche&rsquo;s early experiences served as a sort of warm-up drill to transition from functioning in basic, survival mode as an artist into full-time, well-rounded studio life that&rsquo;s ripe with opportunity. What&rsquo;s interesting, of course, is that the touchstones in Knoche&rsquo;s creative process build on each other in a similar way&mdash;the vessels and platters are functional, the sculptures and larger works push further into unfamiliar territory, and finally the installations are perpetually in flux, always waiting to be arranged and rearranged in an endless run of discoveries.<br />
	<br />
	In 2011, Knoche will spend several months in Australia with ceramicist Ben Richardson. Look for his solo show of new work this May at Crimson Laurel Gallery in North Carolina, and another solo show in October at Anderson O&rsquo;Brien Fine Art Center in Nebraska.<br />
	<br />
	Eric Knoche currently lives and works in Asheville, North Carolina, sharing a studio at Clay Space Co-Op. He is represented by Anderson O&rsquo;Brien Fine Art, The Signature Shop, Crimson Laurel Gallery, and Blue Spiral 1. Learn more at www.ericknoche.com. <br />
	<br />
	Katey Schultz is Associate Editor of TRACHODON, a dinosaur of a little magazine. Her freelance essays focus on art and the creative process. Follow her two-year travels across the country at www.thewritinglife2.blogspot.com. </p>
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            <pubDate>Mon, 02 May 2011 22:30:00</pubDate>
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            <title>2009 Emerging Artist</title>
            <link>http://www.ericknoche.com/?section=news&amp;article=23</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p>
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		<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><span style=\"font-weight: bold;\">Eric Knoche<br />
		June 2009&nbsp;|&nbsp; by Sara Baker &nbsp;|&nbsp; Issue 68, October 2009</span></span><br />
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				<a href=\"http://www.americanstyle.com/wp-content/content/2010/04/emerging_knoche.jpg\" onclick=\"javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(\'/outgoing/www.americanstyle.com/wp-content/content/2010/04/emerging_knoche.jpg\');\" rel=\"shadowbox\" title=\"Eric Knoche ceramic vessel\"><img alt=\"\" src=\"http://www.americanstyle.com/wp-content/content/2010/05/emerging_knoche_cropped.jpg\" title=\"Eric Knoche ceramic vessel\" width=\"296\" /></a></dt>
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				A wood-fired ceramic vessel by Eric Knoche.</dd>
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		<p>
			<span class=\"dropcap\">T</span>here is much more to Eric Knoche&rsquo;s work than what initially meets the eye. His ceramic vessels are abstracts of human figures, bones, houses or even machine parts. Each piece is hand-built using coils or slabs, and then wood-fired.&ldquo;Wood-fired surfaces have a unique ability to reveal themselves to a viewer over time,&rdquo; says the Asheville, N.C., artist.</p>
		<p>
			&ldquo;Clay is very sensitive to the way it is touched,&rdquo; says Knoche.&ldquo;Even if I show someone exactly how I make something, the way they touch the clay will be different, and therefore the final piece will be different.&rdquo; As a result, he keeps no secrets when he&rsquo;s teaching workshops.</p>
		<p>
			Knoche began his career as a professional artist just three years ago, after working as an English teacher in India and Thailand. He is experimenting with a new series of large, human-size vessels and a series of interactive ceramic puzzle sculptures.</p>
		<p>
			Knoche&rsquo;s work sells for $90 to $9,000. It is available at galleries including Blue Spiral 1 in Asheville, N.C., Anderson O&rsquo;Brien Fine Art in Omaha, Neb., and Crimson Laurel Gallery in Bakersville, N.C.</p>
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            <pubDate>Tue, 20 Jul 2010 07:22:30</pubDate>
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            <title>Arboretum Installation</title>
            <link>http://www.ericknoche.com/?section=news&amp;article=22</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p>
	I just finished installing five large outdoor sculptures at the Asheville arboretum as part of <a href=\"http://designexpo.handmadeinamerica.org/\">Handmade in America&#39;s Craft and Design Expo&nbsp; </a></p>
<p>
	<br />
	They will be on display this friday and saturday from 10-6</p>
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            <pubDate>Wed, 23 Jun 2010 21:45:03</pubDate>
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            <title>Large works in progress</title>
            <link>http://www.ericknoche.com/?section=news&amp;article=21</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>]]></description>
            <pubDate>Tue, 25 May 2010 12:40:03</pubDate>
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            <title>Buidling large work</title>
            <link>http://www.ericknoche.com/?section=news&amp;article=20</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p>
	<br />
	&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My desire to create large scale work stems both from my ongoing aesthetic exploration of scale and mass as well as a need to challenge myself technically.&nbsp;&nbsp; While bigger is certainly not always better, with large scale work there is the potential to create a presence that simply isn&rsquo;t possible with smaller work.&nbsp; <br />
	&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While it is difficult to make accurate generalizations about any art, for me, sculpture that approaches the size of a human body takes on additional meaning simply because of its size.&nbsp; Of course this is not to say that large sculpture is in any way better than small sculpture, nor would any random small work benefit from an artificial increase in size.&nbsp; However, I think due to the way humans intrinsically perceive the physical world, we interact differently with large sculpture.&nbsp; <br />
	&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To some extent, most ceramics involve taking the artistic vision from the right side of the brain and bringing the final piece to fruition using the left side of the brain.&nbsp; While there are exception, most ceramic artists have at least clay and glaze formulas to consider, drying and firing schedules, and perhaps structural aids like armatures and molds.&nbsp; The complexity of all of these technical aspects increases exponentially as the size of the work increases.&nbsp; When a solo artist can no longer pick up her work by herself, there is a significant difference in the making process.&nbsp; For me, creating these large vessels involved the help of others at numerous points in the process.&nbsp; Particularly since the kiln they were fired in was over twenty miles (some of it over bumpy gravel roads) from my studio.&nbsp; Thus, they had to be carefully loaded, transported, and unloaded in an unfired state.&nbsp; In making large scale work there is simply more planning and thinking ahead that has to happen for the piece to be successful.&nbsp; Both the artistic exploration and the technical challenge and how they interact are important to me.<br />
	&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Although my current work lacks an overt narrative and on one level deals largely with formal issues of line, shape, mass, texture etc., my hope is that my work communicates with others on a level outside the spectrum of speech and conscious thought.&nbsp; I endeavor to communicate directly with the viscera of my fellow humans.&nbsp; The spacial relations and formal visual components of my work are the result of an ongoing personal exploration into the ability of physical space to resonate within the human spirit.&nbsp; It is my belief that a similar line of inquiry over centuries led to the development of such ideas and philosophies as the Golden Mean and Feng Shui.&nbsp; I think of myself not only as a sculptor, but also as a temporal artist, exploring and crafting this interaction between humans and objects. Ultimately, I am searching for a deeper understanding of the human spirit and its relationship to the things and space around us.</p>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2010 11:10:26</pubDate>
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