Texas Master Series: James C. Watkins

On View
January 30, 2021 –
May 8, 2021
Location
Front Gallery

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Houston Center for Contemporary Craft is pleased to present a solo exhibition by outstanding Lubbock ceramicist and educator, James C. Watkins, who was recently named a Texas Master by HCCC. Watkins joins an impressive roster of other Texas Master awardees—including curator Clint Willour (Houston) and artists Harlan Butt (Denton), Cindy Hickok (Houston), Rachelle Thiewes (El Paso), Piero Fenci (Nacogdoches), and Sandie Zilker (Houston)—recognized for their roles as career artists, professionals, or educators who have made a significant impact on the field of craft in Texas.

James C. Watkins has built an extraordinary career as a ceramicist and an educator. He received his MFA from Indiana University and a BFA from the Kansas City Art Institute.  His work has been featured in 40 solo exhibitions and 164 group exhibitions around the world, and he has pieces in 23 permanent collections, including the White House Collection of American Crafts at the Clinton Library (Little Rock, AR), the Shigaraki Institute of Ceramic Studies (Shigaraki, Japan), the Everson Museum (Syracuse, NY), and, most recently, the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington, D.C.) and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (Houston, TX).

With over 40 years of experience working with clay, Watkins masterfully constructs double-walled vessels, whose forms and surfaces are inspired by his memories of growing up in the South, encounters with nature, and his experience working in Asia. Building upon a history of tradition, he skillfully manipulates his clay surfaces using alternative firing techniques, creating lustrous and colorful surfaces enhanced by the atmosphere of the kiln. For some pieces, he collects dirt from the dust storms around his studio in order to create orange-to-black surfaces. As seen in his Double-Walled Basket (2018), Watkins also wields an iridescent rainbow of color through a fuming technique that he employs as the kiln cools down from a high firing.

Even after decades of experience, Watkins continues to evolve his practice through experimentation and by learning new techniques. In his Reflections series (2014), he etches silhouettes of his wares using a laser cutter, while multiple firings produce an array of warm hues that allow him to reference the synesthetic glow that emanates from vessels within the kiln.

As an educator, Watkins strives to impart his enthusiasm and passion for making. While in graduate school, Watkins taught as an associate instructor at Indiana University in Bloomington and later worked as a visiting professor at Hampton University in Hampton, Virginia, before moving to Lubbock, Texas. Between 1978 and 1983, he served as the director and organizer of the Mackenzie Terrace Pottery Center, a Lubbock-sponsored, public arts facility. Later, he taught architectural delineation for 35 years and architectural ceramics for 12 years at the College of Architecture at Texas Tech University (TTU). He served as the architectural delineation coordinator, from 1998 – 2003, and later became the assistant dean of undergraduate studies, from 2003 -2006.

During his tenure, Watkins received numerous awards, including the TTU President’s Excellence in Teaching Award and the Art on the Llano Estacada Legacy Award from TTU’s Museum Association. In 2005, he built a ceramics program in Vietnam at the Ho Chi Minh City University of Architecture as a Senior Fulbright Scholar. In 2006, he received TTU’s highest honor, the Paul Whitfield Horn Professorship, an award recognizing outstanding research and other creative scholarly achievements; in 2019, he became a Paul Whitfield Horn Professor Emeritus, following his retirement.

Watkins is the author of several books, including Reflections Made of Memories (2019); Alternative Kilns & Firing Techniques (2004) with Paul Andrew Wandless; and Architectural Delineation: Presentation Techniques and Projects (2000) with James T. Davis. He has written numerous articles for national and international magazines, including Ceramics MonthlyStudio PotterNew Ceramics: The European Ceramics Magazine, and China Ceramic Artist.

For more information about James C. Watkins, visit www.jcwclayworks.com.


We invite you to learn more about the exhibition by visiting the virtual learning content below.

Press Release

Low-Vision Gallery Guide

EXPLORE

Live Event: Texas Talks Art: James C. Watkins In Conversation With Kathryn Hall
February 9, 2021, 12:00 – 12:30 PM

Virtual Workshop: Terracotta Vessel Hand Building With Kirstin Willders
February 13, 2021, 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM

Live Event: Craft Chats: Tour Of “Texas Master Series: James C. Watkins” With Kathryn Hall
March 25, 2021, 1:00 – 1:30 PM

Live Event: Artist-led Exhibition Tour With Anna Mayer And James C. Watkins 
Saturday, April 10, 2021 from 3:30 – 5:00 PM

Live Event: Craft Chats: “Exploring Alternative Firing Processes With Clay” Tour With Kathryn Hall 
Thursday, April 22, 2021 from 1:00 – 1:30 PM

Video: Discover James Watkins’ Clay Construction And Alternative Firing Techniques 

Image credits:

  1. Studio portrait of James C. Watkins. Photo by Bonni Oakes.
  2. James C. Watkins, “Guardian,” 2015. Low saggar-fired double-walled caldron. 18 x 21 inches. Photo by artist.
  3. James C. Watkins, “Fumed # 3- Double-walled Basket,” 2019. Fumed stoneware. 14 x 12 inches. Photo by artist.
  4. James C. Watkins, “Fumed # 2- Bottle Form,” 2020. Fumed gold luster. 26 x 22 inches. Photo by artist.
  5. James C. Watkins, “Fumed # 1- Bottle Form,” 2020. Fumed stoneware. 31 x 16 inches. Photo by artist.

Attachments

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft galleries are dedicated to interpreting and exhibiting craft in all media and making practices. Artists on view can range from locally emerging to internationally renowned and our curatorial work surveys traditional and experimental approaches to materials.

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft galleries are dedicated to interpreting and exhibiting craft in all media and making practices. Artists on view can range from locally emerging to internationally renowned and our curatorial work surveys traditional and experimental approaches to materials.

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