Martin
Ibarra
Ceramic Virgins & Other Ceramics Extraordinaire
A
small town in Jalisco is home to Martin Ibarra. He lives across the street
from the town’s sixteenth century church whose lofty wall surrounds the
colonial structure. Often you will see colorful balls, earthenware virgenes,
engraved with geometric designs, drying in the air on top of the wall.
The pieces are the art of Martin Ibarra who supports a family of elders
and youngsters from the damp clay of the surrounding hills.
Martin’s
style is distinctly different from that of his now deceased father, Sixto.
Martin has had big shoes to fill following in his father’s footsteps.
Sixto died in 2001 and had been working with clay over 40 years, after
discovering an ancient cenotaph in the foothills near his home. The workmanship
and whimsical nature of the pre-conquest pottery found at the burial site
inspired young Sixto to begin experimenting with the medium.
Sixto trained his
son, Martin, now a highly sought-after artist in his own right, to carry
on the tradition of creating his folk art in clay. Martin fabricates decorative
hollow clay balls and eggs – all of which he covers with intricate motifs
sketched on the surface by hand. No two pieces are exactly alike, each
being formed and molded by whatever inspiration strikes him at the moment.
Martin
knows that a healthy sense of humor is essential for an artist working
with the sometimes-capricious natural clay. During the rainy season, pieces
can take two to three days longer to dry, and once his creations are hardened,
he cannot be sure they will survive the firing process of the home-built
wood-fired kiln.
Shrugging his shoulders
when asked if he is proud that one of his burnished clay virgins adorns
the home of Mexican President Fox, Martin says, “It’s nice. But what is
really gratifying is knowing the person and his attitude toward the piece;
that he sees it as a work of art and values it as one.” 
A few years ago it
would have been a rarity to spot either Ibarra or his family’s work in
a show, even though the young artist has been working with clay for as
long as he can remember. Born March 9, 1965 – or 1966, depending on which
records are right – Ibarra has well over 20 years of experience under
his belt as a potter.
Martin now offers
over 30 different unique and incredibly intricate virgins as well as lamp
bases, flower vases, pots, plates, and, of course, his well known spheres.
Copycat artists are forcing Ibarra to take a more direct approach in selling
his work. Assistants and apprentices who learned all they know from him
have been lured away to churn out inferior quality imitations. Some of
them even claim to be “the original” but it doesn’t bother Ibarra who
is always searching for something new to improve his designs.
“Competition
helps me surpass myself . . .When my rivals get to the next step, we’re
already two, three or more steps ahead.” He was recently called one of
the three or four best artists of his genre in Mexico by Bernardo Colunga
(brother of the sculptor Alejandro) and has had his name mentioned in
the same breath as regional pottery legends Jorge Wilmot and Jose Bernabe.
But he has a lot to live up to as far as his neighbors are concerned.
His father Sixto is a local legend and it may take another two decades
before Ibarra becomes as revered as his father. Martin is a true folkart
artist who exemplifies the best in Mexican handicrafts.
Contact information:
Maria de Jusus Morales, Juarez #119
San Juan Evangelista, Tlajomulco de Zuñiga
333 753 0017 or 331 321 4498
Or contact Marianne Carlson at 011522 376
765 7485 or email mariannecarlson@gmail.com
(Our thanks to
Norm Tihor for the use of his photographs) |