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Clayton Macone
Miles Macone
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MACONE CLAY
is the artwork of Michael Macone and his two sons Miles and Clayton
expressed in clay. Michael has been making pottery for over 30 years and
his work is in collections around the world. Miles and Clayton began
working with him in 2002. Michael grew up in a very creative environment.
His mother was an artist and she encouraged his gift at an early age,
teaching him to oil paint in 4th grade. He always kept busy with art and
sold his first paintings to neighbors and family friends. One year, after
several consecutive years of winning the school poster contest, a teacher
declared Michael ineligible so others could have a chance to win (Michael
was fine with the arrangement, because the school bought one of his oil
paintings). In high school Michael spent most of his time in the art room.
"If not for those A's in art, I'm not sure I would have had a high enough
grade point average to graduate." He was on track to be a painter, even
converting his bedroom into a studio where he worked on large 4' by 7'
canvases. Then, in 1969, in his junior year, a young clay major named Bruce
Kaupanger interned in Michael's high school. The two hit it off, working on
joint projects in clay, and Michael's aspirations of being a painter
gradually faded. 'The dramatic change in my future career based solely on
Bruce's contagious love of clay, is a testament of the positive influence
of a good teacher." Michael notes. They remain good friends and Bruce
sometimes uses Michael's studio to work on his own new clay projects (an
interesting situation, because the place would not even exist, if Bruce had
not gotten Michael excited about clay). He participated in extensive clay
workshops, then attended Layton School of Art in Milwaukee. After only a
year though, he decided to leave and began a small clay operation in
Minneapolis in a one stall garage. "There was no electricity so I had to
stretch an extension cord to plug in a few lights." He first created novel
pottery planters shaped like blue jeans and called the work Klay Klothes.
The line caught the eye of clothing designer Bill Blass and he has several
in his collection. Selling primarily through local art fairs, he grew the
business until he noticed other companies were knocking off his work,
producing it in China then selling it throughout the country. Taking a new
direction, he designed mirrors and vases, renamed the company Trinity
Pottery, and began selling his work at prestigious art fairs throughout the
country, winning many awards along the way. In 1982 he developed a unique
engraving technique that allowed him to etch his designs right into the
clay, rather than placing them only on the surface. This gives the work a
dimensional quality that can be appreciated with the hand as well as the
eye. This process made it possible to produce a line of high quality
ceramic art tiles that could be distributed wholesale. The new line was an
instant hit and he called the new company Spooner Creek, which now offers a
distinctive assortment of etched ceramic tiles. In 2002 Michael introduced
"The Potter's Shed" line of earthy clay artwork that he sells to galleries
and shops across the country. His two sons, Miles and Clayton now
collaborate with him on wheel thrown, slab constructed, and extruded
vessels that they sell at some of the nations premiere art festivals.
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