Karen Koblitz

+1 (917) 477-1937

Karen is an internationally recognized artist and educator whose vibrant ceramic and mixed media works can be found in collections worldwide. She creates pieces for public and private commissions and is currently Head of Ceramics in the University of Southern California’s Roski School of Fine Arts.

In my work I pay homage to the functional roots of ceramics while elaborating on historical and decorative elements. The influences seen in my work come from life experiences, travels and readings.

OBJECTS OF MEMORY

Objects of Memory is an ongoing work, in porcelain, with all pieces being modeled by hand. The theme of the work comes from my experience in June 2015 of my sister and I packing up our mother's home as she moved into a small apartment in a retirement complex. Packing up and disposing of the hundreds of beautiful objects that my parents had collected over 62 years of marriage was a very difficult and emotional experience. I made the decision to document the "things" that defined their home from sketches and memory. They are installed on furniture pieces to emulate the domestic environment, ephemeral in feeling with a monochromatic palette.

EMBROIDERED MEMORIAL

On the walls of the Pinkas Synagogue in the Jewish Quarter of Prague are listed the names of the 77,000 Jews that were murdered in the Holocaust. The Koblitz surname was among them and through research proved to be family. In June 2017 I traveled to the Czech Republic and visited the National Archives in Prague, Třebíč and Brno with Czech genealogist Julius Muller, to learn who each of these people were. It was an emotional experience and I was able to find records on many family members. Rather than names on a wall, they have become living, breathing people whose memory I would like to preserve.

East Meets West

The exotic crossroads of the Caucasus Mountains and the Caspian Sea, provided inspiration for the body of work featured in my summer 2009 solo exhibition, Earth Tones. I have continued to explore elements of Eurasian cultural symbology, investigating and reinterpreting them in this series of sculptural works.

A University of Southern California Advancing Scholarship in the Humanities and Social Sciences grant made a return trip to Azerbaijan possible. The work included in Earth Tones is based on this return visit.

Tambourine Stone

The California Gaval Dashy (Tambourine Stone), when struck creates a unique resonating sound. This work was inspired by a similar rock found amid the petroglyphs of Qobustan, which 12,000 years ago offered simple stone carvings that tell a narrative of life along the shores of the Caspian Sea. The Azeri tambourine stone was used to beat out cadenced sounds for the Yalli, the dance ancient peoples performed to insure a successful hunt. I have employed my own unique imagery, painted with raw clay on the walls surrounding my stone. A percussion track accompanies the work as members of The Antenna Repairmen—Arthur Jarvinen, Bob Fernandez and M.B. Gordy—were invited to perform an improvisational drumming session on The California Gaval Dashy, coercing engaging rhythms from the rock.

The Azerbaijani symbol of life is the “buta,” whose teardrop contour is the natural outline of a fetus in the womb, a single cell, the brain, and a flower bud, a few images that represent life. Two large circular wall installations, titled Lifecycles I and II are composed of harmonious colorful ceramic “butas”.

A series of simple vessels emulate objects found in ancient burials. Dotted sgrafitto patterns on the surface of these forms are repeated on the wall. These punctuated arrangements were inspired by an archaeologist’s drawings that map the surface symbology found on the vessel’s exterior. Images include tattoos that sister, my niece and me have inscribed on our bodies as personal expression. There is also an image of a swallow in flight, a meaningful symbol of freedom to Azeri weaver Abilova Qanira whom I collaborated with on a series of carpets in 2006/2007.

Azerbaijan to California

The confluence of Eastern and Western cultures are celebrated in works featured in Facing East with the elaborately crafted and richly decorated art, architecture, and literature of Azerbaijan intertwined with images and symbols familiar to my native California.

This work, in clay and hand-woven textiles, is largely inspired by a 15-day journey through Azerbaijan in May 2006, after receiving a Culture Connect Envoy Grant through the United States Department of State, sponsored by the U.S. Embassy in Baku.

Clay, Oil and Madder Root

The installation of “47 Vessels from Sheki,” is arranged in the ancient Asian symbol of a buta (paisley pattern), referencing historic burial sites from the Sheki region. Pottery filled with food and drink accompanied the dead. I use these vessels to trace a history of Azerbaijan and have introduced oil and madder root into various containers. Oil is an abundant natural resource in Azerbaijan and has given this small country a great importance through the ages. Carpet weaving is another notable industry and madder root provided the deep rich red color in dying wool. The color red also symbolizes the blood that was shed through the centuries as Azerbaijan fought with neighboring Persia, Russia and Armenia.

My series of ceramic wall pieces: “Prose and Khan,” “Nino Has Laughing Eyes,” “Shirvan Shah's Delight” and “The Nectar of Baku,” blend ornamental elements discovered in the opulently painted interiors of the Azeri 18th Century Khan's Summer Palace and the ornately carved limestone on the exterior of the Shirvan Shah's Palace. The center of each relief contains a convex vessel in which appear passages from the renowned Azerbaijani novel, “Ali and Nino” (1937), a love story by Kurban Said which takes place at the outbreak of the First World War and introduces the reader to the cosmopolitan and multi-ethnic city of Baku.

Textile and Calligraphic Collaborations

I collaborated with Abilova Qanira on a series of four hand-woven carpets. I was introduced to Qanira, a skilled weaver, during my sojourn in Baku. Looking closely on two of the carpets one can discern a small bird in flight, a swallow, which Qanira has woven into the design as a symbol of hope that one day she will follow it to America.

I teamed-up with Iranian born graphic designer, Negar Nowzar, to include calligraphic designs on two of the carpets. On the carpet titled, “Leili's Secret,” Nowzar has designed a series of butterflies, shaped by calligraphic Farsi script, that flutter in a lush garden of calla lilies, morning glories, and blooming strawberries. These butterflies contain selected passages from the romantic Azeri-Turkish poem, “Leili and Medjnun.” On a fourth carpet, “Tears for the Black Garden (Nagorno-Karabakh),” Nowzar produced a calligraphic tear bottle shape employing Azerbaijani script and a line from Khurshid-Banu Natavan's 19th Century poem, “To My Son Abbas.” These bottles were created to hold tears of bereavement and Natavan's poem is a mournful ode to the loss of her son. Natavan's native city of Shusha is in Nagorno-Karabakh, a region recently mired in conflict between the countries of Armenia and Azerbaijan. Both countries mourn the loss of their native sons.

Islamic Art and the Italian Renaissance

My interest in Islamic Art has evolved from my studies of the Italian Renaissance during a study abroad program my junior year of college in Florence, Italy. Since 1989, I have enjoyed a successful relationship as a designer of ceramics with the renowned Grazia Maiolica Factory in Deruta, Italy. Maiolica pieces of the Italian Renaissance reveal the impact of Islamic Art on the Italian ceramics industry. Islamic forms, techniques and surface patterns came into Italy on ceramic pieces, designed and created by Moorish craftsmen, from trade with Southern Spain. This connection was documented in a 2004 exhibition, “Arts of Fire,” at the J. Paul Getty Museum, curated by Catherine Hess.

Popular Culture meets Fine Art

Past series of work also include various cultural connections. “My Obsession” and “Globalization” series feature images of contemporary collectible objects within the context of historical shapes and surface designs. My objective was to elevate these images of popular culture to the high-end decorative arts. Popular collectible images appear among Chinese floral patterns and the arabesques and blue and white palette of Islamic Art.