Bobbi
Jeanne, born Bobbi Jeanne Dailey in Monterey, California, has been a working
artist for over thirty years. Bobbi is my stepsister. Her mother, Lois
Need, married my father in 1961 after many years of friendship. It seems
Bobbi and I have known each other since the beginning of time and are
destined to be in each other's lives, connected not only through our art,
but through our related families and shared half sister!
After becoming involved with music,
theater, and dance in high school, Bobbi experimented with clay in her
mother's studio. Like all of us growing up in our household, she began
her clay work by throwing tiny weed pots which sold well in the family
gallery in Mendocino, CA. She soon progressed to throwing larger and
larger pots. Being a physically strong person, much taller and stronger
than myself, throwing a lump of red clay down on a slab of plaster,
pushing and kneading it on the wedging board until it was smooth and
free of air pockets, centering the ball of clay on the wheel, and pushing,
squeezing, and pulling the wet blob of clay up and down, all seemed
to come so easy for her, contrary to my own feeble attempts at wedging
and centering. It seemed as if she was born to mold this malleable wet
dirt into beautiful things, beautiful large things, while I began, instead,
wielding a brush full of watercolor, which was easier to push around!
At
one point in Bobbi's career as a potter, she made large floor pots,
Grecian urns two or three feet tall, constructing them out of three
separately thrown pieces welded together with slip and fired as one
huge pot. Her glazes were the earthy greens, grays, and browns, the
surfaces rough and textured, giving the pots a heavy, massive yet natural
bearing, perfect for a couple of long stalks of pussy willows or the
more delicate calla lilies. But bending over a potter's wheel and throwing
large hunks of clay into forms soon took their toll on Bobbi's back.
She turned to the more meditative hand construction of pinch pots, masks,
and figurative sculptures. Over the years she's thrown all sizes and
shapes of functional and decorative pots, rolled slabs of clay for floor
tiles for her kitchen, pinched into shape many full-bodied bowls, and
molded clay sculptures and masks.
Within the past ten years, her work
has been figurative sculpture. After she forms two slabs into a torso
shape, she uses a round thrown piece for the heads of her figures. The
extremities are pushed into shape from the inside while the clay is
still malleable, resulting in a piece which represents the head and
shoulders, sometimes the whole body, and is curvy and soft, very feminine.
One series consisted of just the shoulders with detachable, movable
heads, which the viewer/artist/creator could move in several different
directions, all the way around if so desired, and thereby affect the
expression of the face. Just a slight tilt or angling of the head could
change the entire aspect of a piece, giving it a curious interested
look, a sad or shy retiring look, or a look of great humor or insight.
Bobbi claims her latest series of figurative
sculptures, from the Figuratively Speaking show, were not successful,
partly because of the nature of clay and partly due to the time constraints
she experienced while trying to hold down a regular full time job, however,
she always sees experiences like this not as failures, but as tools
for learning, as paving stones for the next project.
In 1986, she opened her own gallery
in Duncan's Mills, ostensibly to create an outlet for her own work and
that of family members, since we were all making art of one kind or
another. Her place was called The Family Gallery for a long time. From
then it has changed names several times, artists and their work have
come and gone, but through it all, with hard work, her shop, now called
The Quercia
Gallery, co-owned with Ron Quercia, has remained a constant venue
on the Sonoma Coast that supports and encourages local and regional
artists. Her's has been a noble deed, indeed.