Kathy Butterly’s oeuvre is defined by her process: she begins with a cast form, in this instance, a fishbowl, created by pouring wet clay into a plaster mold made from...
Kathy Butterly’s oeuvre is defined by her process: she begins with a cast form, in this instance, a fishbowl, created by pouring wet clay into a plaster mold made from a generic, store-bought vessel, pinching and pulling and folding the clay until she finds something that resonates, Rorschach-like, with her psychological state. She then refines the piece, carving and smoothing its surfaces in a manner she likens to three-dimensional line drawing. The vessel is subsequently fired and glazed—always repeatedly and often upwards of 30 times—allowing her to paint surfaces and build volumes with accumulated layers of glazes and clay. Her work is an exploration of what her materials can do and how she can speak through them. It is also predicated upon risk, for with each firing the chance of loss is always at hand.