Iowa Heritage Digital Collections
State Library of Iowa

Shaman Urn

Shaman Urn

Title

Shaman Urn

Description

As a young man, Eskin was drawn to photography. In high school, his photographs appeared in the daily newspapers and publications. In college, he studied photojournalism, and moved to Minneapolis, MN in 1959. He graduated from the University of Minnesota with a doctoral degree in economics and went on to a distinguished career in marketing research. He taught Marketing Research and Quantitative Methods at Stanford University from 1969-72, and at the University of Iowa from 1972-82. In 1979 Eskin, along with an associate, founded a quantitatively-oriented marketing research company in Chicago, the firm pioneered the use of the bar code scanning as a tool for marketing research. Twelve years ago Eskin retired and returned to his passion of making art in the medium of clay.
Eskin's work falls into three distinct categories: functional works, funerary urns and figures, and installation works. Eskin's life-long interest in archetypal ceramics is best expressed through his monumental "Spirit Houses," which have occupied a central position in his work for several years, and his more recent "Shaman Urns," in the form of hollow seated figures with separately fabricated heads that serve as a cover for the container. <br>Throughout his work Eskin reminds us of our shared histories, our ancestral and archetypal memories of shared humanity that links us in time and space to our past and present.

Creator

Eskin, Gerry

Publisher

University of Iowa. School of Art and Art History

Date

2006-09-09

Rights

Digital collection © The University of Iowa. All works are copyright the individual artist.

Relation

The Daily Palette Digital Collection
Visual Arts
http://dailypalette.uiowa.edu/?artwork=77

Format

clay

Type

Still image
Ceramic (Material); Ceramics (Objects); Clay

Identifier

09092006.jpg
183409339
https://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/