Ocean in a drop

Ocean in a drop

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Ocean in a drop
"Strong, delicate, and drawn to the flame"

"Strong, delicate, and drawn to the flame"

Ceramic artist Judd Schiffman on creating "Heir to the Glimmering World"

Cate McQuaid's avatar
Cate McQuaid
Oct 01, 2024
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Ocean in a drop
Ocean in a drop
"Strong, delicate, and drawn to the flame"
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Judd Schiffman. Photo Sasha Israel.

I first saw Judd Schiffman’s work at ODD-KIN a year ago – an ambitious narrative wall installation of tiles depicting Mothman, a moth-like humanoid first seen in West Virginia in 1966. “The Self That Touches All Edges” shows the cryptid embracing a tree with eyes. The piece suggests a tenderness for life in the face of our fleeting minutes and a changing biosphere. The artist has work in a local exhibition, “Encircled,” right now at Drive-By Projects. His solo show, “Mothman in the Bardo,” runs at Emerson Dorsch gallery in Miami through Nov. 2.

I took Mothman to be an avatar for us humans, and perhaps for the artist himself. Reading what he writes about his creative process, I can see how he would identify with such a creature; his work itself is an amalgam of nature, the mythic dimension, and the soulfulness of knowing life’s richness and brevity. Judd’s work seems to say: Our time is over in a flash, and yet everything we have lived so far colors and shapes the present moment. Eternity is a river where all experience collects. It moves, yet we will always find it in the same place – but deeper, if we look.

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“Sometimes I have a dream or an experience, and it takes a couple of years to come out in my ceramic work,” Judd writes. “The framed pieces at Drive-By Projects are an amalgamation of different experiences 20 or 30 years old. Backpacking in the Southwest, going to a funeral in Zimbabwe, and meeting with a therapist in Providence. The works help me to understand vibrant experiences and create a map of them. I think about all these things and make drawings,” which lead to his sculptures.

Here, he details the creation of a Mothman work in the Emerson Dorsch show, “Heir to the Glimmering World.”

Judd writes:

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