Art
March 4, 2021

MCA Denver Shop Maker Natalie Legg of Void & Form Ceramics

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There are countless makers and small businesses in Denver utilizing their craft to create objects we can live with and incorporate in our daily rhythms and routines. In the MCA Denver Shop, we’re always keeping an eye out for new makers to bring into the shop; makers that align with our mission and stretch our vision for the shop. 

We recently had a conversation over email with one of our new makers, Natalie Legg of Denver-based Void & Form Ceramics. We chatted with Natalie about her forthcoming mug club, the void, and where function and ornamentation collide in her ceramic practice. 

Hey Natalie! First of all, how are you doing?

I’m actually doing pretty well all things aside. I don’t mind staying at home, which is where my ceramic studio is located, I’m very much an introvert. I thrive being alone and just experimenting in the studio. Counting the days ‘till I can plant seeds in the garden and get my hands dirty outside.

selfie of artist Natalie Legg smiling softly with her mouth closed and sporting medium length brown hair with fringe. She’s wearing a black sweater and is holding a forest green coffee mug. She’s standing in front of a large multi-color woven wall hanging that is hung on a green wall.


How has the last year changed or shaped your artistic practice?

With everything that has happened over the last year, the Covid-19 pandemic, systemic racism and social equity surfacing yet again, I’ve had time to reflect on what really matters in life. Early in the year of 2020, I had a full time job as a graphic designer, which I’ve been practicing for over 15 years, but since then I have gone part-time in-order to pursue ceramics more. Spending countless hours in front of the computer isn’t natural, it’s not healthy and it’s draining, emotionally and physically. Working with my hands, getting dirty and having complete artistic freedom in ceramics is so much more rewarding. So now with more time to focus on my ceramics, I’m hoping to expand outside of just fulfilling wholesale orders and stock my shop and start a mug club.


Where did the name Void & Form Ceramics come from?

Theaster Gates has this amazing quote that beautifully says exactly what I think of clay as I work with it: “It’s about having a sense of a thing that is under-fashioned, lesser understood, unbuilt dirt, that with skill and a knowledge of form, one can then take this stuff (dirt) and turn it into something useful. And the only limitation between dirt becoming a useful form or just dirt, is ability.” 

The void is the nothingness between the idea, the shape, the form of the object. Like a piece of marble that can only become a form or shape once you begin to take away from it, only then can that form be revealed. It’s the reshaping of nothingness. I love drinking out of my mugs and thinking that it was once just dirt in the ground and the transitions it has gone through to get to where it is now.

Two stacks of terra-cotta colored mugs waiting to be glazed. Each stack includes five mugs, and each mug has a different style handles on them. The mugs are sitting in front of a speckled black and white backdrop.


Your ceramic objects center functionality and utility, being that they function as vessels to hold a cup of coffee or tea or another beverage. What does the conversation between functionality and aesthetics, or utility and ornamentation, look like for you?

Love this question. Having a background in graphic design, I might not approach ceramics similar to other ceramicists. I think first of its functionality, what it will hold and how much, will it be filled with something cold or hot? If it’s something hot, the handle should be far enough away from the mug itself so your finger doesn’t get burnt and you can hold it confidently enough with one hand. Everyone has different sized hands, so I do have several different handle types I play around with. Any mugs that have superficial flaws, I keep for myself and use on a daily basis. Doing this, I’m able to interact with the mug and get a feel for its size, handle type, weight, glaze surface, etc. This helps me get a better sense of what's working and what's not and adjust. I want my mugs to be functional, beautiful, and ergonomic. 

Much of your line of ceramics feature earth tones and other shapes and textures that are reminiscent of nature and palettes found in our shared landscapes. What inspires your work?

I love showing the rawness of the claybody, through it’s slightly rough texture or it’s actual raw color, not covering it completely with glaze in order for you to see the clay in its natural state. I’m inspired by the claybody color itself, which will dictate what glaze I use and how much of the raw surface I keep revealed. In the past, I’ve played with organic and more geometric shapes but now I want to focus more on the shape of the mug and handles themselves and the glaze will be more simplistic and secondary to the mug versus having that be the focal point.

Moody image of a single mug bathing in sunlight on a wooden table. On the left side of the frame is a green plant. The mug is predominantly white with black speckles, with a light brown stroke of color towards the bottom.

 

Two small mugs with round handles stacked on top of each other and held in one hand. The mugs are light brown with black speckles on them, adorned with lines of cream brush strokes going in different directions. The mugs are held up against a white textured wall and there is a large green plant on the left side of the frame.


On your Instagram you mentioned a mug club...what might this look like and how can we be a part of the mug club?!

YES! I’m super excited about this and hoping to start a mug club in the next month or two. A mug club would be a yearly subscription that only a very, very limited number of people could participate in (around 20-25 people - not entirely sure). Being a mug club member you would receive a one-of-a-kind mug mailed quarterly. This would be a mug-only mug club members could receive and would never be sold within my store.


Mugs and ceramic objects in general are often incorporated in folk’s daily rhythms and rituals. What do you hope for those that buy one of your mugs? 

I hope that it becomes someone's favorite mug that they want to drink out of every single day and are heart-broken when they find someone else drinking out of it. An object that someone wants to keep out of the cabinet and on the counter, desk or coffee table. I want it to be an enjoyable experience that one would want to keep repeating over and over. 


SHOP VOID & FORM MUGS THROUGH THE MCA DENVER SHOP HERE!