Ron Nagle is an American sculptor, musician and songwriter. He is known for small-scale, refined sculptures of great detail and compelling color. Nagle lives and works in San Francisco, California.
Life
Born in San Francisco in 1939, Nagle was introduced to ceramics by his mother at an early age. He practiced ceramics in high school and developed an interest in jewelry-making which he pursued into his college years. Nagle enrolled as an English major at San Francisco State College, but later switched to the school's BFA, and graduated with a focus in ceramics in 1961. Between 1961 and 1978, Nagle taught ceramics at San Francisco Art Institute, California College of Arts and Crafts, as well as at the University of California Berkeley, where he apprenticed to Peter Voulkos, a core member of the Abstract Expressionist Ceramics. In 1978, Nagle began a professorship at Mills College, where he taught ceramics for over 30 years. His involvement in West Coast culture—surfing, rock music, hot rod culture—is integral to both his art and music. Nagle owned a 1948 Ford Coupe to which he applied 40 coats of British racing green, sanding between each layer to achieve depth of color. This same fanaticism is evident in the detailed color and texture of his sculptures.
Work
Ron Nagle has practiced ceramics for over 50 years. He has worked extensively with the typology of the vessel—specifically the cup—and pushed through the utilitarian concerns of traditional craft into formal consideration of the medium. His small-scale, intimately sized sculptures are often composite of multiple elements and involve a confluence of techniques and materials including slip-casting, airbrushing, hand-molding, traditional and non-traditional glazing, scalp-metal, polyurethane, wax, and epoxy. Drawing is fundamental to Nagle's practice, and he considers his work from a two-dimensional, flat point of view. This resonates with his stated interest in painting, where he cites influences such as Giorgio Morandi, Cy Twombly, and Billy Al Bengston. His work is associated with the California Clay Movement, and Nagle is often included in exhibitions concerning Abstract Expressionism. Although Nagle has shied away from association with the traditional craft of ceramics, he has noted the influence of his contemporary sculptors working in the medium, such as Kenneth Price, as well as such vernaculars as Japanese Momoyama ceramics and 1940s American restaurant ware. Nagle also looks further, mining uncanny sources such as cartoons, graffiti, food arrangement and fashion for inspiration.
Music
Apart from his sculpture, Ron Nagle is also a musician and songwriter. In 1965, he founded the “San Francisco Sound” rock’n’roll band The Mystery Trend with a group of friends while at the San Francisco Art Institute. Nagle has also completed several solo albums, including Bad Rice that was released by Warner Bros. in 1970. Along with fellow San Franciscan Scott Mathews he formed the band The Durocs and had modest hits "Hog Wild" and "Saving it all up for Larry". Pablo Cruise did three of his songs on their first two albums. Ron Nagle also worked on the sound effects for The Exorcist. The artist magnified and distorted sounds of jar-trapped bees and shattering windows to create disturbing effects in the horror film. His love of wordplay expressed in his lyrics is evident in the pun-laden and darkly humorous titles Nagle gives to his artworks.
2011 Arts and Letters Award, American Academy of Arts and Letters 2008 Joan Danforth Endowed Faculty Chair, Mills College 2006-07 Metz Chair, Mills College 1998 Flintridge Foundation Visual Artist Award The Best of 1998, Dave Hickey, Artforum 1997 Fellow of the American Craft Council 1996 Joan Danforth Endowed Faculty Chair, Mills College 1990-97 Faculty Research Grant, Mills College 1986 National Endowments for the Arts Fellowship 1984 Faculty Research Grant, Mills College 1983 Mellon Grant 1981 Mellon Grant 1979 Lucie Stern Chair, Mills College National Endowments for the Arts Fellowship 1978 Adaline Kent Award, San Francisco Art Institute 1974 National Endowments for the Arts Fellowship