POT SHOP / EARLY WORK
Melchert was Peter Voulkos’s studio assistant at UC Berkeley in the now infamous Pot Palace, the ceramic studio in the basement of the University Art Museum. It was a vibrant, round-the-clock scene that included, among others, artists Stephen De Staebler, Manuel Neri, Ron Nagle, Richard Shaw, Mary Heilmann, Marylin Levine, and Nancy Selvin. The Pot Palace became the seat of a revolution in ceramics.
For several years, Melchert’s art-making was distinctly influenced by Voulkos’s work. He elaborated, “Pete Voulkos was the one who changed everything for me – he believed in doing things larger than you’re used to doing, so that your body becomes physically involved. One of the things I learned from Pete is to think of the material as your partner.”
Jim Melchert at the Pot Shop UC Berkeley, 1960
Bob McKee (left), Peter Voulkos (top center), Ron Nagle (bottom center), Jim Melchert (right), UC Berkeley, 1960
Jim Melchert, Pot Shop, UC Berkeley
The Pot Shop, UC Berkeley, 1965
Untitled, circa 1960
Untitled, 1961
Record Cabinet, 1961
Slow Boat, 1962, clay, wood, lead, 42" x 20" x 8", Kaneko Museum collection
Door F, 1962, earthenware, wood, lead, 76" x 36" x 10.5", San Francisco Museum of Modern Art collection
God Shelf
Jim Melchert (left), Nick Stephens (middle), San Francisco Art Institute, 1962
Untitled, 1962, glazed stoneware, 36" x 14"
Untitled, 1961, wood, lead, ceramic
Leg Pot, 1962
Jim Melchert circa 1963
Untitled, 1963, fired clay, 31" x 41"
Jim Melchert in Berkeley studio, 1963. He shared this studio with Carlos Villa.