THE WHEEL KEEPS ON TURNING
The Good Life|April 2020
Tossing in his day job promoting the arts and returning to actually making art
Jamie howell
THE WHEEL KEEPS ON TURNING

“Idiocy. Great word,” says Mike Caemmerer. “I’m good at it.”

Hands covered in drying clay, Mike sits with a potter’s wheel spinning quietly between his legs reflecting on a big decision he made a few months back — to walk away from a full-time job with benefits that he’d held for more than half a decade to do … what? Throw pots and write screenplays?

Actually, it sounds brilliant to me — to most people, I’d wager.

Quit your job, leave behind that flickering computer screen to pursue the heart’s most creative desires? It’s the stuff of movies.

I’ve come up to the Grunewald Guild’s Pottery Studio in Plain to learn a bit more about how this recent leap into unemployment is sitting with him. Plus,he’s promised to show me how to throw my first pot.

Quit your job, leave behind that flickering computer screen to pursue the heart’s most creative desires? It’s the stuff of movies.

Getting into the buff Mike lofts a blob of clay called Vashon Buff into the air and catches it, sensing its weight, pressing it into and out of new shapes, working it.

Mike’s a big guy at six-footsix, so when he throws the clay down onto the pottery wheel it flattens with real force.

He dips each hand into a bowl of water, presses a foot pedal to set the wheel in motion and then cups the mound as if he’s protecting it from the wind. I see the clay begin to alternately flatten and grow tall according to the pressures he applies.

Mike has been working in ceramics since 1988, but he’s been around the arts his entire life.

This story is from the April 2020 edition of The Good Life.

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This story is from the April 2020 edition of The Good Life.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.