Skip to main content

Search form

Shopping cart 0 items
Subscribe
Donate
Login
Share
Login
Home
  • Become a Member
  • Journal
    • Current Articles
      • Interviews
      • Narrative
      • History
      • Technology
      • Criticism
      • Other
    • Print Archive
  • Announcements
    • General
    • Classified
    • Events
    • Newsletter
  • Calendar
  • Participate
    • Write for SP
    • Internships
    • Donate
      • Partners
      • Underwriting
  • About
    • Mission
    • History
    • Masthead
    • Board of Directors
    • Contact
    • Privacy Notice
    • FAQ
  • Grants
  • L&L Kilns
Vodu priest pouring libations, Kuli Village, Volta Region, Ghana.
Vodu priest pouring libations, Kuli Village, Volta Region, Ghana.

From Arkansas to Ghana, The Clay is Still Red

Dr. Samuel Nortey

&

Adam Posnak

Editor's note: The following article is a collaborative effort between Dr. Samuel Nortey and Mr. Adam Posnak, reflecting the authors’ shared experience of international exchange. In the text that follows, Dr. Nortey’s contributions are represented in italics, and Mr. Posnak’s are in roman type.

Vodu ritual pots, Kuli Village, Volta Region, Ghana. Photograph by Adam Posnak, graphics by Zoe Pappenheimer.Dr. Nortey: Many of the studio potters in Ghana have been trained through informal apprenticeship programs or by skills passed on from their parents, who considered pottery a family profession. An emphasis on formal education has, however, made many young people shun the profession: they seek white-collar jobs instead. I am a ceramicist trained by and now teaching in the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) Department of Ceramics. My first interactions with foreign ceramicists were with Adam Posnak and Jeannie Hulen. We had communicated for a year about the possibility of their visiting my department for teaching and research. I welcomed the idea and was enthused about their coming first because of the cross-fertilization of skills and ideas it would offer, and second, because of the opportunity it would offer me to fraternize with Americans in the ceramics field. 

When I met Jeannie and Adam at their hotel on the KNUST Campus, Adam gave me a gift of a thrown mug with a design that used African concepts. The cup he gave me confirms the ability of art to transcend borders and backgrounds. It says that there is a clear opening for dialogue and exchange of ideas. That mug has since been the unique piece on my serving tray and has received the attention of many visitors to my small studio. The question always is “Which African artist made that mug?” From the foregoing discussions, your answer is as good as mine.

...
Read more
Back to Issue

Author Bio

Dr. Samuel Nortey

Dr. Samuel Nortey is a practicing ceramicist and senior lecturer in the department of Industrial Art at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Ghana. He holds a PhD in African Art and Culture, has trained indigenous potters, and has published extensively on expanding the frontiers of pottery and ceramics production in Ghana and sub-Saharan Africa. 

Adam Posnak

Adam Posnak grew up in Macon, Georgia. His great-grandfathers were blacksmiths, his grandfather a woodworker, and his mother a studio potter. Posnak holds an MFA from Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, and a BA from Macalester College, St. Paul, Minnesota. Adam teaches ceramics and foundation courses at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. Contact him at adam@adamposnak.com.

Website

CONTACT  |  NEWSLETTER SIGNUP  |  COPYRIGHT © 2020 STUDIO POTTER  |  SITE DESIGN

Design by Adaptive Theme

Member Log in

Enter your Studio Potter username.
Enter the password that accompanies your username.
Forgot your password?
Continue as Guest
Become a Member
Library IP Login