Who was DebLynne?
Debbie Van Cleave died of cancer in June, 2001, at age 28. The text which follows was written by Debbie
about six years ago. For more on Debbie, see Sam Venable's book,
Mountain Hands: A Portrait of Southern Appalachia, 2000, University of Tennessee Press,
pictured at the bottom of this page. In 2003, Debbie's work was displayed as a part of the
East Tennessee Historical Society's
exhibit, titled Mountain Hands, based on Sam Venable's book.
"Being blind since birth I have always had an affinity for tactile art forms,
especially ones involving physical molding such as hand built clay sculpture
and later wheel thrown pottery. At age three I first discovered the
joys of play dough, molding it into unrecognizable forms I said were
animals, boats, etc.; and making the inevitable play dough mess for
my mother to clean up. I now have a daughter (born in 1993) who makes
the same unidentifiable sculptures and great messes, but also makes
lovely pinch pots. The main difference is that she is sighted and uses
my scrap clay instead of play dough. The clay is more fun for her because
she can then paint and fire her creations. At about age five or six
my mother bought me my first real bag of clay, from which came the inevitable
pinch pots, etc. which were then fired in my grandmother's kiln. Some
of my Christmas ornaments from that era still hang on our tree.
My true talents for clay art manifested themselves in high school art classes
where I had an art teacher who was afraid to let the Blind Student work
with sharp objects. Therefore I was mostly confined to clay sculpture.
That is when I first began considering pottery as a career. After high
school I bought a kiln and began making and selling hand built pieces.
Soon after, I began working in the pottery shop of a family friend (Buie
Pottery in Gatlinburg, where my work is available). There I gained much valuable knowledge about
pottery and got my first experience with the potter's wheel. Buie is
the one I give credit to for giving me the encouragement I needed to
take pottery classes at both the University of Tennessee and Pellissippi
State Community College. This led me to go into business for myself.
Since then Buie has given me much technical and moral support which
has helped me immeasurably with the trials and tribulations of starting
a pottery business. I have been building DebLynne Pottery for about
six years now, and I have displayed my wares at several juried shows,
including the Museum of Appalachia Homecoming show, the Dogwood Arts
Festival in Knoxville, the Mountain Makins Festival in Morristown, Tennessee,
the Lenoir City Arts and Crafts Festival, the Greeneville Iris Festival,
and the Experimental Aircraft Association Fly-In in Oshkosh, Wisconsin
(where I display and sell pottery with aircraft images). The thing that
makes my pottery different from others' is that I imprint my pottery
with a wide variety of tactile images. These images are hand painted
by my helpers (notably my mother) before the pieces are glazed and fired
to the middle of the high fire range. From this process comes the slogan
on my business card, "Fusing the tactile and visual arts..."
To see a list of shows we attend and have attended, click here.
To see some pictures from several of these shows, look here.
