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Matthew Kangas captures the essence of the debate as to whether those working in craft media are artists or not, covering all crafts media with a special emphasis on ceramics.
"Silent Sunflowers is a opportunity to look beyond the current ethnic struggles in Yugoslavia, to glimpse some of the treasures which enrich an important part of Europe. We hope there can be perhaps greater understanding of this area by seeing the arts and crafts of its people and that an effort will continue to be made to protect, preserve, and enjoy the cultures where many Americans find their roots."--BOOK JACKET.
Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
The first time Richard Fairbanks' hands touched clay his future was assured. At an earlier age, Dixie Parker recalls strongest memories of a desire to paint. When the handsome young professor arrived on the Drake University campus, the shy, dowdy sophomore art student describes a mystical-magical force upon "hearing" Richard's name, knowing with certainty they would someday marry. For two decades the couple's tenuous connections flowed through Richard's university teaching and Dixie's professional coming of age at the vibrant Des Moines Art Center during its greatest transition. Each artist had opportunities to meet and learn from great art personalities of that period. Richard's 1960 Fulbright grant to Finland brought contact with designer Kaj Franck, glass master Oiva Toiikka, and most notably potter Kyllikki Salmenhaara at the famed OY Wartsila-Arabia manufacturing firm. Dixie's curatorial, teaching and painting skills were honed at the museum with New York guest painters Nicolas Marsicano, Will Barnet, and Jimmy Ernst. Seven years after arriving in Iowa, Richard acceptance of a cut in rank and pay to return home to teach at Central Washington College was stunning. For Dixie, with romantic dreams unrealized, and her passion for painting escalating, there was equal incentive to move on. Job offers included a one-person art department in Athens, Ohio and enticing invitations to relocate in New York to further stretch her artistic wings. With scant notice after returning to the Northwest, Richard flew into Des Moines on a stopover after his first of many European research journeys. On a humidly hot Sunday morning, the dashing professor proposed marriage to Dixie, a woman who had finally found her personal and professional footing and had no hesitation accepting. This account of the Fairbanks' shared life brims over with highest of high and lowest of low experiences. Much is related through compelling journals, personal and business letters, accomplished art exhibitions, museum and university recollections, studio work and shared far-flung travels. Since Richard's death mid-career in 1989, their bond continues through Dixie's two-decade effort to preserve the unprecedented collection of Richard's ceramics, educational archive, and their folk art collection. In the end, the author assures us that the miracle of love prevails."