Bandana Pottery
Michael Hunt and Naomi Dalglish Bio
Michael and Naomi live and work in the mountains of western North
Carolina. Using many local materials, they collaborate in making wood
fired utilitarian pottery. Although they make and glaze the pottery
together, individually, Naomi makes the figurative sculptures, and
Michael makes the large jars.
Michael got hooked on clay in high school, and became a student at
Penland School of Craft shortly after graduating. It was there that he
met Will Ruggles and Douglas Rankin who became teachers and mentors to
him. Several years later he was invited to go to Korea to learn the
traditional method of making large Ongii storage jars with master Ongii
potter Oh Hyang Jong. Upon returning from Korea, Michael began setting up
a studio and building a large Thai-shaped wood kiln in the Penland area.
Naomi began making pottery with her grandmother as a child. She studied
clay at Earlham College with Mike Theideman, a former apprentice of Warren
MacKenzie. She spent a semester in Mexico, where she studied with Mexican
potters and discovered pre-colombian clay figures. In addition to making
pottery, she began making sculptures inspired by pre-colombian and
Japanese Haniwa figures. After college, Naomi came to Penland to take a
kiln building class and met Michael, who was building a kiln at his
studio.
Michael and Naomi discovered they shared a similar passion and approach to
making pottery. Now they work together as full time potters, firing their
kiln four times a year, and occasionally teaching workshops. Their
pottery is named "Bandana Pottery" after the small community in which they
live. They exhibit their work nationally.
Artist Statement
We make our pots using primarily coarse, impure local materials. Our pots are thrown on a slow turning Korean-style kick wheel, and the large jars are made using a traditional Korean paddle and anvil technique. We then fire the pots in a large, Thai-shaped wood kiln. Through this collaboration with powerful materials and processes, we hope to create an environment in which pots can be born with a beauty beyond what is possible with our own hands. Beginning with the geologic processes that form the coarse red clay, passing through our hands and kiln, the life of these pots is continued through years of daily use.