I’ve been making pots for ~ 30 years at the Harvard Ceramics Studio. Usually 6 hours a week in their amazing facility. I have done some scientific illustration and enjoy designing pots with creatures on them. Big bowls are my favorite, they are useful and provide a large canvas to draw on. This year I retired and am continuing work in my home studio in East Blue Hill.
My first love is soda firing. Introducing a sodium carbonate solution into a very hot kiln vaporizes the solution, and the sodium seeks out the silica in the clay body to form a glaze. On the way it interacts with the slips and oxides of the surface decoration. There are myriad unpredictable variables that affect the outcome of each pot. Meticulously applied surface details can be obliterated or brought to life. It’s a gamble: each piece is unique. 
Because I can only soda fire a couple of times a year I have been exploring cone 6 porcelain. I  Have been using blue slip on white porcelain and carving through it to draw the designs. I also use water etching to create relief drawings glazed with amber celadon.
Lansing Wagner
Exhibition CV
1999 Hilles Library Harvard University Solo Show, Cambridge, MA
2001  State of Clay, Lexington, MA People’s choice Award
2014  State of Clay, Lexington, MA
2016  State of Clay, Lexington, MA
2016 – 2019 Holiday Show and Sale, Harvard Ceramics Program, Allston, MA
2020 Functional Canvas Show, Charlie Cummings Gallery, Gainesville, FL
2022 Featured in the 25th anniversary issue of Pottery Making Illustrated
2022 Invited to the 2022 Functional Canvas Show, Charlie Cummings Gallery, Gainesville, FL

Galleries
Crane Platter, Soda Fired Stoneware.
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