The Oak Spring Podcast
In this episode of the Oak Spring Podcast, ceramic artist Frances Palmer joins host Chris Stafford for a conversation that weaves together craft, gardens, discipline, and creative evolution. A two-time visitor to Oak Spring—first as a participant and later as an instructor—Frances reflects on the profound generosity and understated elegance of the landscape, where artists are given both tremendous trust and deep access. Inspired by the topiaries, greenhouses, historic terracotta pots, and the legacy of Bunny Mellon, Frances designed a hands-on course that guided students from studying Oak Spring’s living collections and library holdings to building their own terracotta vessels. In a powerful full-circle gesture, she fired the pots in her own studio and mailed them back to her students, completing a process rooted in tradition, stewardship, and making. Frances also traces her own winding path—from early ambitions in printmaking to studying art history at Barnard and Columbia, working at MoMA PS1, and ultimately building a ceramic studio at home after the birth of her daughter. A maker at heart, she speaks about the discipline of daily practice, the unpredictable magic of the kiln, and the deep parallels between tending a garden and working with clay—both require guidance, then surrender. With reflections on craftsmanship, mentorship, and the resurgence of interest in fine craft, Frances offers insight for emerging artists: repetition builds mastery, exposure helps—but long-term devotion to your practice is what sustains it. Host: Chris Stafford Oak Spring website: https://www.osgf.org/ [https://www.osgf.org/] Subscribe to the Oak Spring Newsletter: Email: programs@osgf.org Instagram: @oakspringgardenfoundation Twitter: @oak_spring Facebook: Oak Spring Garden Foundation
28 episodios
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