Wheel
thrown and hand sculpted clay art. Specializing in Folk
Faces,
Garden Sculpture, Bird Houses, hand crafted, one-of-a-kind Tiles,
uniquely hand painted “fun”ctional bowls, pitchers, plates, etc.
Availability:
Saturday mornings at the
market, other times, at my studio. Please call first to be
sure
I’m open.
Philosophy: After many years of working in a high stress job,
I
am now fulfilling my passion for working in clay. However, my
art
is not work…there is nothing I would rather do. My desire is
to
make people smile when they see my creations.
Contact: Donna Kincaid,
clay artist
Address: Roseland, VA
Phone: 434-361-1725
E-Mail: mountainvision@earthlink.net
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Donna Kincaid works
in her Mountain Vision Pottery studio in Beech Grove.
By Erin McGrath
Published: September 10, 2008
Donna Kincaid has an
eclectic sense of style.
While
working at her Mountain Vision Pottery studio in Beech Grove last week,
she was dressed in blue jean Capris, an old T-shirt, gold-rimmed
glasses, a dirty apron, bright red sandals and earrings with a dangling
Harley Davidson logo.
She was surrounded by clay sculptures of
cats, dogs, an angel, chickens, fish, birdhouses, blue and purple
turtles and much more.
“If I don’t have it here in this studio, then I don’t have it,” Kincaid
said.
For the past 20 years, Kincaid, 61, has been sculpting pieces of clay
into works of art.
Her
love affair with pottery began two decades before that, though, Kincaid
said. She began collecting pieces of pottery from the destinations she
and her husband, Joe, called home while he was in the Navy.
“We’ve literally lived all over the world,” Donna said. “It had quite
an influence.”
The couple was living in Japan when she fell in love with pieces of
Japanese pottery, she said.
“Before
I ever even knew anything about pottery, I kept seeing this beautiful
black pottery, so I took a group of Navy wives to Mashiko,” Kincaid
said. “I was just blown away because there were these little hut type
places where the potters live and they dug their clay back up in the
hills and they had these huge mounds of clay that they were reclaiming.”
Her infatuation grew a short time later while the couple was living in
Portugal and watching the people there create pottery.
“They were digging the clay there and creating their pieces,” Kincaid
said.
Finally,
in 1988, while living in Norfolk, Donna attended a clay sculpture class
at Old Dominion University with Rita Marlier, a professional sculpting
professor.
“I met Rita and the first thing she did was she
handed me a lump of clay and she said ‘Now show me what you can do,’ ”
Kincaid said. “The moment I touched that clay, I could feel the life in
that clay.”
“It was just my way of releasing stress and tension.
When I spent four hours every week just focused on that, it just got
into my blood.”
Kincaid was a Realtor before deciding to give it
up in 2000 to pursue pottery full time. She trained as a production
potter for a year before she and Joe moved to Nelson County in 2001.
“It
taught me very good discipline,” Kincaid said about the training. “It
taught me to really respect production potters, but also, it would
really drive me crazy to make the same thing over and over again.”
Almost
every piece of pottery Kincaid makes, she alters in one way or another,
she said. To vases and bowls, she will add a sculpture of a fish or
flowers and hummingbirds.
She also uses leather tool stamps to write small messages or words on
some of her pieces.
Kincaid
not only has collected pottery from all over the world, but she also
has collected clay from places like Wyoming, North Carolina and Maine
to make some of her sculptures.
Now, she said, she’s starting to
write down ideas she has for sculptures because “I’ve just got a lot in
me that needs to come out.”
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