Sunset Hill Stoneware Employee Spotlight: Jordan Johnson

Everyone who works at Sunset Hill Stoneware has incredible talent and skill. This might seem like an obvious statement—after all, potters make our handcrafted custom stoneware on pottery wheels. But, our crew’s talents go far beyond what you can pull out of a kiln. Meet Jordan Johnson.

He started working at Sunset Hill Stoneware in December 2016, making 2018 his second full year here. By day, Jordan works in our shop’s prep and finish stations. After hours though, he creates drip paintings that are found all around the country and highlighted in coffee shops around nearby Appleton, Wis. like Copper Rock Coffee Company and Brewed Awakenings.

Natural Disaster by Jordan Johnson

CREATIVE MINDS

Jordan first took up painting when he was 23 years old and working at Waupaca Foundry. Working second shift until 10 p.m. for six years left him looking for a hobby.

“I had these ideas of Jackson Pollock-style artwork, but I didn’t want to copy him, and I wanted more vivid color,” Jordan said. “So I just started experimenting in my basement and it led to doing that at three in the morning for quite a while. Then I slowly crafted what I wanted out of it.”

Over time, Jordan’s art captured the public’s attention to the point where he was able to sell it around Wisconsin. He had no formal education in art, although he’d long been interested in abstract artists like Mark Rothko and Frank Stella.

“I always had this creative mindset to do it,” Jordan said. “I always took art classes, but I didn’t pursue anything outside of high school.”

RESULTS OVER SUBSTANCE

Some painters are very particular about the supplies that they use, even paying top dollar for certain name brands. Jordan, on the other hand, has a slightly more resourceful approach when he’s getting supplies for a new painting.

“I would go to all the paint stores and I would buy all the missed paints, because they were cheap,” Jordan said. “I’d get canvas for cheap then too, and I’d just scrap together all this stuff and that way it would cost less and I could still get the job done properly.”

To this day, this is still an important part of Jordan’s process when he creates a new painting.

Jordan Johnson's Aether

“Like, this red isn’t perfect and this white is slightly off, but it’ll work for what I’m doing,” Jordan said.

Despite not using the most expensive paint for his work, Jordan still creates splatter paintings with intricate patterns and colors. One of the pieces of which he’s proudest, Aether, features a galaxy of cool colors bleeding out from the center in a pattern like a nebula.

“I like taking a black hole-esque color scheme, with purples and blues and lime greens and pink and black and white,” Jordan said. “I just had this month where everything I made was perfect… and I’ll never sell (Aether). It’s in my living room.”

Another painting he has done, Natural Disaster, features a hurricane of earth-toned colors like green and ocher and yellow raining down the edge of the canvas.

The process of creating these drip paintings is mostly enjoyable for Jordan. The only issues he faces are paint fumes, and the occasional particular customer who commissions him.

“A woman called me and I went to her house, and she wanted a piece above her fireplace,” Jordan recalled. “It’s a very natural, earthy-looking one. She was really tough to work with, but the outcome was one of my favorite pieces. Just the struggle to get to that was very challenging.”

 

PAINTING AND MAKING CUSTOM STONEWARE MUGS

Aside from Pollock, Jordan draws influence from current artists like Vanessa Prager, who lives in Los Angeles. She creates abstract oil paintings that look like a chaotic array of smeared layers of paint up close, but from a distance they resemble a human face.

“It’s hard to see, but she can really just create something out of that,” Jordan said.

Artists often have different sources of inspiration when they work. In some cases, it’s from their environment or people they see as muses. In Jordan’s case, he always listens to a different album or artist with each piece he creates. After completing each painting, he writes the name of the album he used on the back of the canvas. Some of Jordan’s customer have even started to ask him to listen to certain albums while he creates their pieces, adding extra challenges and fulfillment to his work.

Jordan Johnson Painting in Coffee Shop“Originally, when I would get done with work (at the foundry), I was kind of defeated, I was dirty, I was unhappy,” he said. “But, I would make that painting and I’d look down and I’d think, ‘I created this. This is something uniquely for me,’ and I get that feeling every time.”

Thanks to social media, Jordan’s paintings are now in Minnesota, Illinois and as far west as Arizona, Oregon and Washington. These pieces across America show just how much Jordan has grown as an artist in the five years since he began painting.

“I feel like I’ve honed in on what I wanted,” he said. “I experimented a lot of different ways, a lot of bad color schemes, but I learned.”

However, some of his goals for his artistic career still have his Sunset Hill Stoneware coworkers’ heads spinning.

“If I could put a painting on a wheel and spin it as I’m painting,” Jordan joked, “That’s my next objective.”

Since Jordan has started throwing stoneware part-time at the shop, he’s gotten that same feeling of satisfaction every time he finishes handcrafting new mugs.

“I really didn’t have any previous skill. It was tough for a little bit there, because I was getting it but I wasn’t,” Jordan explained. “They weren’t perfect. It’s been a challenge, but I feel like it’s a good thing.”

More artwork from Jordan Johnson can be found on his Instagram account.

 

 

Meet Sunset Hill Stoneware's Artisans

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