| The glaze covering Jussi Ojala’s ceramic works seems
to burst, breaking up in mysterious patterns and gliding down
along the sides of the vessel until coming to a halt in thick
bulges resting around its base. Often, the glaze appears to
make up but a recalcitrant partner to the underlying form,
unruly and defiant sometimes to the point of threatening to
part ways with its companion. At the same time, however, the
two remain prerequisites to each other. They are united, though
not in some shared singularity but rather cohabiting in a
duality that draws attention to the distinct character of
its separate components. If during modernism’s period
the Swedish ceramic artists enjoyed draping their glaze like
a tight-fitting glove on a harmonious vessel body, the glazes
on Jussi Ojala’s pieces sit like a restless, swelling
mass on forms that themselves seem warped and trembling.
We are confronted by a movement that has frozen in its course,
yet without repose in tranquillity. Our gaze is not allowed
to settle and rest. The glazes break open, but not, to be
sure, for the sake of revelation. On the contrary, they do
their utmost to obscure the real shape of the vessel. The
forms remain concealed beneath the irregular, haphazard patterns
and relief effects, and the contours of the vessel’s
body become altered by the thickness of the glaze. What results
is seldom beauty in its immediate sense; rather, these pieces
fascinate us with their capricious and coarse nature. However,
in Jussi Ojala’s works from the past few years, we also
find many instances of unexpected beauty suddenly emerging
from the midst of all that we encountered as eruptive and
deformed. Here it can be a pot in which the convulsions of
the glaze are arrested in a sort of guarded concentration,
as if only to gather strength before the final fit. The beauty
is in the brinkmanship of this balancing act. In another piece,
fragments of the shattered surface of a white glaze assemble
in a cluster like sparkling snowflakes falling over a night
sky; we stand before this vessel like a child staring at the
stars.
Jussi Ojala’s ceramic works frequently display a close
connection to nature and, maybe above all, an affinity to
the fundamental human condition. Personal experiences and
impressions are compressed into pieces that on the whole can
only be described as monumental. The monumentality of the
pieces lies not always in their dimensions but in their complexity
– they constitute something that is a product of both
a clearly formulated vision and a volatile process.
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