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In 2016, Ruby May, Heilo Blue and Kari decorating the “magic room” of their new home, originally built as cold/dry storage for food in the early 1900s. It's a kids-only club house where big play and imagination happens.
In 2016, Ruby May, Heilo Blue and Kari decorating the “magic room” of their new home, originally built as cold/dry storage for food in the early 1900s. It's a kids-only club house where big play and imagination happens.

Successful Women Do Have Children

Leanne McClurg Cambric

&

Elizabeth Robinson

&

Kari Radasch

This is a conversation between Kari Radasch, Elizabeth “Beth” Robinson, and me, Leanne McClurg Cambric, who documented it. We all are working artists and moms of young kids, who graduated from high-profile masters programs in the early 2000s and have had a running fifteen-year dialogue about our struggles to balance our personal and professional lives. Even finding time for a conversation like this one was a challenge, as we live in three different time zones.

 

Kari: Most of the time I’d pay ten dollars for ten minutes [of kid-watching]!

 

Beth: I was finally able to find someone really great for ten dollars per hour. It's awesome. I’m hoping it will help take enough stupid stuff off my plate so that I can actually make pots again with regularity.

 

Leanne: Are we trying to be twenty-four-hour women? Artist, mom, wife, educator, intellectual, and still stunningly good-looking in our forties?

Did you two have a role model for being an artist and a mom?  I had short interactions with several people in the field over many years but other than my mother, I can’t think of anyone significant—except for Lisa Orr. Seeing her balance motherhood and professionalism was a turning point for me. Through her, I finally had a flashlight and could see the road ahead, and I stopped hearing the voice that said, “You must choose between being successful in the field or being a mom.”

 

Beth: Lisa Orr was one of the first people I called when I got pregnant and was trying to puzzle out what this whole life-as-an-artist-with-a-child thing might look like for me. She was one of the only people I knew personally in the field who had both a career and a young family. Her advice helped me realize, among other things, it wouldn’t be a good idea to schedule a workshop a month after the baby was supposed to be born. Seeing her in action during Art of the Pot[1] the year before I was pregnant helped put motherhood in the context of an active maker.

...
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Author Bio

Leanne McClurg Cambric

*/

Leanne Cambric is an assistant professor at Governors State University located in south Chicagoland, where she lives with her husband and two boys, ages 3 and 7. She grew up in Alaska, received her BFA from the University of Minnesota, and her MFA from Louisiana State University. She handbuilds in porcelain with a strong sense of allegorical autobiography.
artaxis profile

leannemcclurg.com

Elizabeth Robinson

*/

Elizabeth Robinson (Wiley) is a creative entrepreneur, wife, and mother to two grade-school boys whose creativity constantly blows her mind. Born in D.C., she has a BS in Biology from James Madison University in Virginia, and an MFA from Ohio University. She is beginning an intensive focus on dinnerware in her studio practice in 2017. 
artaxis profile

elizabethrobinsonstudio.com

Kari Radasch

*/
Kari Radasch is a native Mainer, living in Portland with her husband, Ian Anderson, daughter age 7, and son age 4. She received her BFA from Maine College of Art and her MFA from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Her work celebrates life, using earthenware clay, color as metaphor, historical references, and an occasional ironic nod to kitsch.

kariradasch.com

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