Jan McKeachie Johnston

Jan McKeachie Johnston?s early work included majolica surface decoration that she used as a way to add color to her pieces. Her later work grows from the functional ceramics of England, Bernard ...
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    Jan McKeachie Johnston?s early work included majolica surface decoration that she used as a way to add color to her pieces. Her later work grows from the functional ceramics of England, Bernard Leach, and Shoji Hamada. This body of work is typically glazed with one color.She fires most of her work in a wood kiln that fires for 60 hours.

    McKeachie-Johnston's work references pottery forms from around the globe, particularly the fiber basket forms of Native American and Japanese makers. In addition, MacKeachie Johnston?s work is influenced by Japanese Mingei pieces and she is a part of a group of Minnesota potters whose work is called Mingeisota, referencing Japanese influences and those of Warren MacKenzie, no doubt the most famous maker and teacher in Minnesota.Although her pieces are functional she is also interested in them standing alone as a well-conceived object.

    She teaches workshops around the country alone and with her husband, potter, Randy Johnston.

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    Apprenticeships & Residencies
    Primary Work Experience
    1972

    Studio Potter

    Other

    Public Collections

    Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

    Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis, Minnesota

    rosenfieldcollection.com

    Weisman Museum of Art, Minneapolis, Minnesota

    Bibliography

    Chung Dong-Hun. American Contemporary Ceramics. Korea, 2003.

    Ferrin, Leslie. Teapots Transformed. Madison WI: Guild Publishers, 2000.

    Hluch, Kevin. The Art of Contemporary American Pottery. Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2001

    Hopper, Robin. Clay and Glazes for the Potter. Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2000.

    Richter, Lester. American Shino, The Glaze of a Thousand Faces. Peterborough, England: Chameleon Books, 2003.

    Riddle, Mason. “Potters’ Home/Studio Complex: a World of Simplicity.” St. Paul Pioneer Press, August 10, 2003

    “Women Who Fire With Wood.” Ceramics Monthly (October 1998).

    CV or Resume

    Website(s)
    Tags (related topics)

    River Falls, Wisconsin

    Citation: Jan McKeachie Johnston, "The Marks Project."
    Last modified April 29, 2026. https://www.themarksproject.org/artists/jan-mckeachie-johnston

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