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The 2003 St. Petersburg Clay National

The Member's Gallery
Jennifer Lachtara
Artist-In-Residence Alumni

Artist Statement

I grew up in bars. Friday nights I learned to shoot pool in bowling alley bar rooms after my mother finished league bowling. Saturday nights were spent throwing darts in the bar my father and uncle owned and operated. So, it wasn’t so strange that I turned to the hospitality industry after high school in order to pay for college. It was in the dim light of an Orlando tourist attraction, an oyster bar/sports bar, and a high end martini bar that I learned the complex subtleties of the barware that I served cocktails to patrons in each night.

Rosie O’ Grady’s in downtown Orlando was the highlight of it all. The live Dixieland Jazz band. The World Famous Flaming Hurricanes. It was a spectacle, and most of the drinks came with their own souvenir glass. I spent five years there learning the ropes of serving and bartending…in addition to my job as a Can-Can Girl. The colors on each my pieces reflect this larger-than-life room – the bright colors of a swirling Can-Can skirt, the shimmering outfits of Charleston and soft shoe dancers, and glimmering trumpets.

However, I did not begin to appreciate how the different shapes of barware affected the overall taste of beverages – specifically wine and martinis – until bartending at the Sinatra Bar of an Orlando chophouse. One of the factors I was most intrigued with was the way the heat of one’s hand changes the temperature of the cocktail, thereby affecting the taste from the first sip to the final swallow.

I throw each of my chalices in four parts and then assemble them for this very reason. Although, the ball and upper trumpet shape add a decorative element to the piece, they perform very important functions. Each piece is designed so that the hand will hold the ball and nestle under the upper trumpet shape without touching the beverage container at the top. This should allow the beverage to retain more of its original temperature and taste from start to finish.

It is in the spirit of the barware I have been around all my life that I strive to make these items of beauty and function. Ones that viewers will want to take home with them as their own souvenirs in which to drink their favorite libations.

 

Biography

Jennifer Lachtara was born in 1976 in Winter Park, FL. Her first introduction to art came as a very young child – her grandmother and aunt encouraged her to draw and nurture her creativity – a long-time love that has never gone away. In 1997, Ms. Lachtara graduated from the University of Central Florida with her Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism with a specialization in Advertising & Public Relations. After a year working at Bernard Hodes Advertising Group, Ms. Lachtara longed to rekindle her creative energies, and re-enrolled at UCF as an art major specializing in graphic design.

Her second semester at UCF, Ms. Lachtara took her first class in ceramics. During the course of that one semester, she found her calling. The following semester, she dropped her designation as a graphics design major and switched to ceramics. In December 2002, Ms. Lachtara graduated from UCF with her Bachelor of Fine Arts degree with a specialization in Ceramics. She was hired as an Artist-In-Residence at the St. Petersburg Clay Company two months later.

After two years working as an Artist-In-Residence, Ms. Lachtara was hired as the Marketing Coordinator for St. Petersburg Clay Company. She currently works from her studio in St. Petersburg, Florida.

My Work



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