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Richard Bresnahan, Artist in Residence
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Excerpts from A Passion for Pottery,
by Gael Fashingbauer
Cooper
Admirers of the pottery crafted by Richard Bresnahan can't seem to
agree on its origins. Bresnahan, a 1976 graduate of
Saint John's University who has
served as director of Saint John's Pottery Program since 1980, is
definitely American: He was born in Casselton, N.D.., and attended
Saint John's Preparatory School. But he spent his senior year in
college and three years after that in Japan as an apprentice with the
Nakazato family, who have crafted pottery for 13 generations and are
a Japanese "national living treasure family."
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"[Americans] sometimes say, 'Richard makes Japanese-style
pottery,' and then the Japanese who come here say, 'Boy, Richard, you
sure make American-style pottery,'" Bresnahan admits. What does the
artist himself think? "I say it's Minnesota pottery," he says.
Bresnahan praises
college faculty, particularly Sister Johanna
Becker, OSB, of Saint Benedict's, who made the connections for his
Japanese apprenticeship. "There are these moments [at small colleges]
when a university teacher can almost [be] like a wing covering a
young bird," Bresnahan says.
But when he returned in 1979, Bresnahan spread his own wings.
Saint John's agreed to help him set up a totally indigenous pottery
studio with the agreement that sales of the work would sustain the
studio after the first two years.
Bresnahan shares his knowledge with students through his popular
January-term course, (Art and Sustainability). Says Bresnahan,
"The class is a tremendous joy to me."
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Richard with daughter Margaret and son
'little' Richard |
Bresnahan and his wife, Colette, live with their young son and two
daughters in Avon, Minn. He credits his wife, an accomplished head
nurse, as indispensable in his life and work. "I've gotten tremendous
accolades as an artist," he says. "But if you don't have a great
partner to walk through life with, you're miserable." Rest assured
that Richard Bresnahan is far from miserable.
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