“Exploration of form and color”:Kristin McKirdy
2023-05-10

Kristin McKirdy

 

Education

 

Master of Fine Arts

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) 1990

Sous la direction de Adrian Saxe

 

Maîtrise d'Art et Archéologie 

Paris IV - Sorbonne  1981

Mémoire sur l'histoire de la céramique moderne.

 

An American, though born in Canada, Kristin McKirdy has chosen France as the place in which to live and to create. Over the last twenty years she has become a central figure within the world of French decorative arts, and is, perhaps, the artist who best personifies the renewal of ceramics in our country.




 

As well as being an historian specialized in France’s brilliant early 20th century glazers, she is also an heir of the pioneering heroes of American ceramics. From Peter Voulkos, who was the first to “sculpt” clay, to Ken Price and Ron Nagle, she has assimilated the essential lesson of freedom these men transmitted through their work, and so found a new and unique way of approaching her art form.

Her language thus nurtured and matured, Kristin McKirdy offers it up in a permanent dialogue with time and space. Through her pieces she allows us to encounter the cultures of Asia, Europe, and the Americas, crystallizing these infinitely varied landscapes of inspiration in her own intimate and personal lexicon. Powerfully charged with the history of humanity, her pieces take us back to a primal object, freed from all traces of mannerism and decoration, drawing deeply from culture in order to rediscover the archaic. Their simple,  tactile volumes invite touch, and evoke a softness that awakens the senses. In rediscovering the pleasure of ceramics, each work is an encounter with the genesis of form and, perhaps indeed with that of life itself.

It is this inexpressible presence of life and of history that is so singular about Kristin McKirdy’s work, as pursued over the last two decades. Contemporary yet timeless, discreet yet determined, modest yet radiant, the artist reveals herself, step by step; from one piece to the next she creates a family of objects that surprise us despite their apparent familiarity. The eggs, the seeds, the half-open bowls concealing treasures; these are wombs, horns of plenty, reminding us that the earth is generous to mankind, and, like ceramics, has been with us since we took our very first steps—and indeed earlier: in the cradle of humanity itself