Currently, Pfeiffer Fire Arts and Fiber, Inc. is a small
pottery consisting of two people: Dan and Laurel. We are a couple of hobby potters who have decided to make pottery our full-time career
or second career if you like. Why
shouldn't we do what we really enjoy on a full-time basis? The older
we get, the more we say: "we should!"
So, in 2004 we began to build and equip a pottery in Oak
Grove, Alabama. You won't find Oak Grove on a map ... it is just south of Ardmore,
Tennessee and west of Interstate 65 in Northern Alabama. The pottery studio is still a work in progress
too, like
everything else related to this venture, but we are now up and running!
All of our pottery is hand made, high-fired in a natural
fuel kiln, and composed of either stoneware or on rare occasions porcelain.
We have plans to do more with the porcelain but having more than one clay
working at a time can cause more problems than we are up too at this time. We have
developed our own set of glazes, and will continue to experiment and add
new glazes. While glaze development is a time consuming task we learn a great deal from it
and feel it gives our pottery a distinctive look. It also gives us great
flexibility in creating just the glaze we like.
What about the "Fiber" part of the name? Well, we also
produce home-spun wool (Lincoln ) yarn and weavings made from that yarn.
That has been an on-going interest of Dan's for years and years. If someone
should have an interest we could do private lessons on spinning or weaving.
Both are great fun but much like pottery are complex and quite time
consuming. The home-spun wool is used to make rugs but Dan's first love in
weaving was in overshot and he may at some point go back to doing more of it.
You may ask, what does the fiber have in common with
pottery? Well everything of course! Both are a handcraft that are at the
same time easy to look at and "appear" easy to do, but then you
can go on
and spend a lifetime learning the details of each craft. Both have a great
"feel" to the material being fashioned. You need to develop a touch to be
any good at either and both have a very good sense of accomplishment when
you get all the details right. There is no right way to do either but lots
of wrong ones. Both require a lot of research and testing of techniques.
Both have near endless possibilities so you are never at a lost of new
things to learn. Both allow you to start doing something that looks ok after
a short bit of training and then go on to better work with greater
understanding and control as you progress. Of the two we would say that
pottery is the more complex and has a greater range of ways to express
yourself but we could be wrong! Dan has only been weaving for 30 years
and there is much more he could learn and maybe at some point he may have to
rethink this.
One of the reasons people will always be attracted
to handcrafts is that we live in a very fast paced world that we have very little
control over and often no real understanding of how it works. Working with
both your mind and hands to create work that lasts, in the case of pottery
that can be thousands of years, can give you a connection to the real world
that video games and computers never can. You have a direct connection from
your thoughts (what to make) and the making -- moving from the world of words
to real things you can use every day.
There are not many jobs today where one person works on a
product from start to finish. Both pottery and weaving are a process that
has a lot of steps and skills to master but they both have a rhythm to the work
that has been lost in most jobs today. The tools we use are easy to
understand, often handmade themselves, and are an extension of your hand.
Pottery is a very physical process that is both hard work at times and
at other times much like playing a musical instrument, a light flowing touch and
a pot flows up out of the lump of clay. Fire transforms mud into stone and
glass forms that will last much longer that we will.
Our other handcraft is bread making and we have an 8"
granite grist mill that we use to grind wheat and rye and we make a very
respectable low carbohydrate bread from this. Hopefully soon we would build a wood
fire oven to go with it but only after we get a new kiln built! One thing we have leaned is there is no end of building projects in a pottery.
Our studio is open by appointment and when we are in the
studio. As we are busy about many things it is best to call and be sure we
will be here when you are! We always like to visit with other potters and hear what
they are working on as well as those interested in pottery or learning more
about pottery. We have a small show room to display our work as part
of the studio. We are also always closed on Sunday.