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I have worked with three generations of the Lembesis family Yiannis, Niko and Kateh Lembesis since 1999 in their pottery on the island of Sifnos, Greece. From my home east of Athens, it takes me about 7 hours to reach the Lembesis pottery.--bus, metro, foot, slow or fast boat, and bus. I usually visited several times in the summer to work for periods ranging from 2 days to 10 days. Now that I have retired from the University of Minnesota, I visit when I can throughout the year.

Originally, I was invited to be one of a number of artists who did not work with clay, who would work in collaboration with the traditional functional potters of Sifnos. The result was to be an exhibition in the abandoned monastic buildings of Firogia.

The first year, 1999, I was assigned to work with the potter Giorgos Exylzes. Our area was to be the monastic kitchen. And I proposed that we develop and inscribe utilitarian vessels with texts from some modern and contemporary Greek poetry that in theme or idea referred to food or to the kitchen.

One poem was from the “Axion Esti”, an epic work by noble prize winning Odysseus Elytis. The title of the poem was 'the Garden of the Lambs' and I knew there was a traditional pot that Sifnians use to cook lamb. George does not throw large works and he took me to the Lembesis pottery where Yianni threw two 'mastello'on which I inscribed the Elytis poem.

The following summer, I worked with Nikos Raviolos, a potter who is one of Yianni's nephews.Again, we were assigned to the former kitchen of the monastery. We developed a series of 11 utilitarian bowls and vessels related to traditional Mediterranean recipes. Such as poppy petal or dandelion or caper salad, wine in which rosemary is added (which is good to lower blood pressure), and strawberry leaf tea. Again Yiannis threw some large bowls that I inscribed with patterns for the holding of koliva, a traditional food served at memorial services for the dead.

Since that summer, the family has graciously welcomed me as team member in the decorative work on vessels.

Among us, we discuss the development of forms for various cooking and decorative uses. A lot of this is based on revisiting (through reproductions) the Byzantine ceramic forms and how they relate to the traditional utilitarian and decorative forms with which they are so familiar. In addition, we have been experimenting with an expansion of sgrafitto patterns, based either on the byzantine or on observation of natural forms in the environment.

We have also experimented with using some of the traditional Byzantine glazes over the traditional white slip (baidana). The pottery had not worked with color before.

In February, 2004, Yiannis and his two eldest sons, Manolis and Nikos, who work with him in the pottery, visited the University of Minnesota as Artists-In-Residence in our new art facility. It was an extraordinarily exchange mutually beneficial for everyone. Students and faculty were thrilled by the Lembesis’ facility and productivity in throwing traditional forms, especially the ease with which they adapted to a variety of clays which, up until that point, they had never encountered. Everyone joined in the process of sgrafittoing on pots. The Lembesis enjoyed the interaction with students and faculty, especially their introduction to the wealth of information regarding glazing processes that Professor Tom Lane generously offered. And there was of course the overwhelming hospitality of Minnesotans in winter!

A set of DVD’s of this residency, including a powerpoint presentation about the traditional pottery of Sifnos is available from Michael Hanisch, michael@mindthemind.com

Tom Lane visited Sifnos with one of our graduate students, Nick Darcourt, in the summer of 2005. With the family they developed a video documenting the traditional pottery of Sifnos. In Greek and English with subtitles it is available from Tom Lane. tlane@umn.edu

In 2006 Niko returned to Minneapolis to work in the studios with our undergraduate, graduate students and faculty, exchanging ideas and approaches to functional and sculptural ceramics.
As a result of what he learned during this visit he has successfully initiated the use of lead free glaze to all ceramic work in the Lembesis pottery.

In Feb. 2017, Yiannis again came to the University of Minnesota for ten days to demonstrate the creation of traditional Sifniot ceramics. Students and members of the ceramic community were fascinated by his facility and the diversity of utilitarian vessels.

What is presented in this album is a selection of our work together.

large bowl aug8884sml.jpg

large fish bowl ( unfired) with Yianni Lembesis, 2014

large fish bowl.jpg

large fish bowl 2016

_fish bowl_12indiameter.jpg

fish bowl 2017

fish platter 2017sml.jpg

fish platter 2017

octopus platter 2017sml.jpg

octopus platter 2017

eight octopus bowls.jpg

four octopus bowls 2014

2018 6 octopi bowls sml.jpg

2018 6 octopi bowls

_sgrafitto bowl_24_22diameterx8_22hsml.jpg

Spring 2016

bottle5sml.jpg

bottle5

bottle8sml.jpg

bottle8

bottles7137-sml.jpg

2018 bottles

vases.jpg

vases/bottles 2020

_lilyplatter_18_22diametersml.jpg

Lily Platter 2017

_roka4297sml.jpg

2017 roka bowl

2018 Cajal homage.JPG

2018 Cajal homage

_fish-10-one left4280sml.jpg

fish bowl-one left 2018

2018 fish plate sml.jpg

2018 Rofos platter

2018skink-sml.jpg

2018 skink bowl

______________2846sml.jpg

αχινούς/ sea urchins

sea urchins_ bowl_ 2020_ 33 cm diameter.jpg

sea urchin bowl, 2020

____________2896sml.jpg

κρίνος/ lilies 2019

fish spiral platter.JPG

fish spiral platter 2019

krinos2760sml.jpg

krinos/ lilies 2

octopi platter.JPG

octopi platter

unfired octopi  piatela.jpg

unfired octopi piatela

pomegranate platter.JPG

pomegranate platter

poppies2897sml.jpg

poppies

tsalapetinos.jpg

tsalapetinos/ hoopoe platter

________________2761.jpg

πλοκαμια/ tentacles 2019

radiating bowls sml.jpg

radiating bowls2019

paltters_radiating .jpg

platters, radiating patterns 2019

platter_ black radiating .JPG

platter, black radiating pattern, 2019

platter_ blue radiating.JPG

platter, blue radiating pattern, 2019

fish bowl 2_ 2020_ 33 cm diameter.jpg

Fish bowl, 2020, blue

fish bowl_ 2020_ 33 cm diameter.jpg

fish bowl, 2020, black

2018 three fish sml.jpg

2018 three fish bowl

IMG_8223.jpg

black fish plates

garden bowl 1.jpg

garden bowl

grain bowl 2020_ 28 cm.JPG

Grain bowl 2020

lily bowl 4.JPG

Lily bowl, 2020

bowl with sgrafitto

bowl with sgrafitto

large fish bowl sml.jpg

large fish bowl 2020

pitcher

pitcher

vases

vases

Yianni and Niko with large bowlsml.jpg

Winter bowl

IMG_0621.jpg
big fish platter0280.jpg

large fish platter 2021

fish platter 2 sml.jpg

fish platter 2021

 
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