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It was during a college
art class that Amy Beth Harrison (Post Baccalaureate Certificate '07) first laid her hands on clay and knew she had
found her medium. “It was so soft and malleable, so responsive,” she recalls.
“I’ve tried other forms of sculpture, like woodworking and metal, but clay is
more forgiving. You can shape it into whatever you want.”
For
Harrison that has meant abstract landscapes: deeply
textured wall sculptures in rich browns and terracottas that evoke fields,
trees, stones, and undulating hills. Her other work has taken the landscape
connection even further: at Brigham Young University, where she earned a BFA,
and then during a residency at the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, she
created amulets and curling sculptures that hung from trees. “I’ve always been
attracted to natural beauty,” Harrison says. “I grew up in suburbia—it was
basically a cement parking lot—so anytime I found green space I’d get really
excited.”
When it came to
Harrison’s childhood interest in art, it was her parents, especially her mother,
who got excited. “My mom was criticized when she was a kid for not being able to
draw,” Harrison says. Then her mother died when Harrison was 16. As an artist,
Harrison says, “I feel like I’m living my mom’s dream a little bit, living it
for her.”
Harrison’s own dream
has brought her to the Museum School, where for the next year she plans to
continue her work in ceramics; to branch out into glass, photography, and
papermaking; and to apply to graduate school. It’s a tall order. But part of
what drives Harrison is her Mormon faith, which helps her, she says,
to always try to be a better person. “The best artists have a strong sense of
self, because art is about personal vision,” she says. “I’m my strongest self
when I do art. I am that better person.”
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