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      <eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="MnHi"><?replace_text {fileName}?></eadid>
      <filedesc>
         <titlestmt>
            <titleproper>MARTHA W. CUTKOMP:</titleproper>
            <subtitle>An Inventory of Her Oral History at the Minnesota Historical
               Society</subtitle>
            <author>Finding aid prepared by Jennifer Huebscher</author>
         </titlestmt>
         <publicationstmt>
            <publisher encodinganalog="Publisher">Minnesota Historical Society</publisher>
            <address><addressline>St. Paul, MN.</addressline></address>
         </publicationstmt>
                   <seriesstmt><p>Oral History Collection</p></seriesstmt>         </filedesc>
      <profiledesc>
         <creation>Finding aid encoded by Jennifer Huebscher<date>August 2010</date></creation>
         <langusage>Finding aid written in <language langcode="eng">English</language>. </langusage>
      </profiledesc>

   </eadheader>

   <archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="MARC">
      <did>
         <head id="a1">OVERVIEW</head>
         <repository label="Label:"><corpname>Minnesota Historical Society</corpname></repository>
         <origination label="Creator:"><persname role="creator" encodinganalog="100">Cutkomp, Martha
               W., 1917-2010, interviewee.</persname></origination>
         <unittitle label="Title:" encodinganalog="245$a">Oral history interview with Martha
            Cutkomp.</unittitle>

         <unitdate label="Date:" encodinganalog="245$f" type="inclusive" normal="2006/2006"
            >2006.</unitdate>

         <langmaterial label="Language of Materials">Materials in <language langcode="eng"
               >English</language>. </langmaterial>
         <abstract label="Abstract:">Martha Cutkomp discusses her background, her interest in art,
            particularly ceramics, her career as a potter, and her time in Minnesota.</abstract>
         <physdesc label="Quantity:" encodinganalog="300">Sound recordings: 6 sound cassettes (60
            min. ea.) Transcript: 62 pages; 28 cm.</physdesc>

         <physloc label="Location:">OH120: See <ref target="a9">Detailed Description</ref> for shelf
            locations.</physloc>
      </did>
      <bioghist encodinganalog="545">

         <head altrender="biography" id="a2">BIOGRAPHICAL</head>
         <p>Martha W. (Jaques) Cutkomp grew up in Mount Pleasant, Iowa. She attended Iowa State
            College where she began making pottery in the Ceramic Engineering department in 1936.
            She earned her degree in Applied Art in 1938. After teaching home economics and art for
            a year in Stratton, Iowa, she married Laurence Cutkomp in 1940, with whom she would go
            on to have four children. They lived first in Ithaca, New York; then Philadelphia,
            Pennsylvania; then Sheffield, Alabama; before settling in Minnesota in 1947. In 1949 she
            took classes at the St. Paul Summit School of Art and began wheel throwing. Cutkomp
            built a pottery studio in the basement of her home in Saint Anthony Park and spent the
            next several years as a self-described full time housewife and part time potter. </p>
         <p>Martha Cutkomp’s reputation as a talented potter continued to grow over the next two
            decades, during which time she participated in many group art exhibits/sales and became
            a charter member of the Minnesota Crafts Council. Cutkomp divorced in 1969 and moved to
            a rural area in Woodbury, Minnesota where she was a full time potter out of her home
            studio. She continued to participate in many group shows and sales in addition to having
            solo sales at her own studio several times a year until her retirement at age
            seventy-two. At that time she sold her home in Woodbury and moved to Shelton,
            Washington, where she has resided since 1988. Since then she has continued to create
            functional and sculptural porcelain and stoneware pottery. </p>
      </bioghist>
      <controlaccess>
         <head id="a7">CATALOG HEADINGS</head>
         <p>This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog of the Minnesota
            Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about related topics should <extref
               href="http://mnhs.mnpals.net/F" show="new" actuate="onrequest">search the
               catalog</extref> using these headings.</p>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Topics:</head>
            <subject encodinganalog="650">Ceramics -- United States.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="650">Potters -- United States.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="650">Pottery -- United States.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="650">Women potters -- United States.</subject>
         </controlaccess>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Persons:</head>
            <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700">Anderson, Marcia G. (Marcia Gail),
               1949-</persname>
         </controlaccess>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Document Types:</head>
            <genreform encodinganalog="655">Oral histories.</genreform>
            <genreform encodinganalog="655">Interviews.</genreform>
         </controlaccess>
      </controlaccess>
      <descgrp type="admininfo">
         <head id="a8">ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION</head>
         <prefercite encodinganalog="524">
            <head>Preferred Citation:</head>
            <p><emph render="italic">[Indicate the cited item and/or series here]. </emph>Cutkomp,
               Martha W., Oral history interview with Martha Cutkomp. Minnesota Historical
               Society.</p>
            <p><emph render="italic">See the Chicago Manual of Style for additional
               examples.</emph></p>
         </prefercite>

         <acqinfo encodinganalog="541">
            <head>Accession Information:</head>
            <p>Accession number: AV2010.42</p>
         </acqinfo>
         <processinfo>
            <head>Processing Information:</head>
            <p>Catalog ID number: 007171578</p>
         </processinfo>
      </descgrp>
      <dsc type="combined">
         <head id="a9">DETAILED DESCRIPTION</head>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               <unittitle>Martha Cutkomp, </unittitle>
               <unitdate>September 28, 2006.</unitdate>

            </did>

            <scopecontent>
               <p><emph render="bold">Scope and Content:</emph> Subjects discussed include childhood and family background;
                  early interest in nature and art; college at Iowa State; potting after she moved
                  to Ithaca, New York; making ceramic jewelry and having her first daughter, Kay,
                  after moving to Pennsylvania; moving to Alabama and hand modeling clay at that
                  time; digging and processing her own clay; finding her own materials to create
                  oxides; creating her own glazes; moving to Minnesota and buying a home in Saint
                  Anthony; classes at St. Paul Summit School of Art with Warren MacKenzie and Alix
                  MacKenzie; starting wheel work; materials and processes used while taking classes;
                  creating a studio in the basement of her Saint Anthony home and building her own
                  wheel and kiln; art influences, including potters Bernard Leach and Michael Cardue
                  and fellow artists she has associated with in Minnesota; her artistic process and
                  color choices; involving her children in art as they were growing up; her
                  children’s careers as adults and their individual artistic styles; her shift to
                  using porcelain and a smaller scale in her work; creating functional versus
                  sculptural works; moving to Woodbury and living in a rural environment closer to
                  nature; creating her studio at her Woodbury home; participating in fairs and
                  shows; involvement in the Har Mar Mall Fine Art Show and Apache Plaza Art Show;
                  meeting artist Dewey Albinson; the process of selling her work at shows and out of
                  her studio at her own sales; the volume of work she created and had available for
                  each sale; being included in the fine art exhibit one year and demonstrating wheel
                  throwing for several years at the Minnesota State Fair; her identity as a woman
                  potter; dealing with patrons and pricing; what participating in art shows and
                  fairs is like now for her daughter and son-in-law; her signature on her work;
                  sharing ownership of a kiln with potter Peter Leach; significant patrons of her
                  work; involvement in the Minnesota Crafts Council; her views on donating work;
                  retiring and moving to Washington state; materials, studio access and fellow
                  artists in Washington; selling her work in Washington; current activities and
                  being creative. </p>

            </scopecontent>
            <scopecontent>
               <p><emph render="bold">Interviewed by:</emph> Marcia G. Anderson.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <userestrict>
               <p><emph render="bold">Use Restrictions:</emph> None.</p>

            </userestrict>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <physloc>OH 120</physloc>
          
                  <physdesc>62 pages.</physdesc>
               </did>

            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <physloc>OH 120</physloc>
                
                  <physdesc>3 master cassettes (60 min. ea.) and 3 user cassettes.</physdesc>
               </did>

            </c02>
         </c01>

      </dsc>
   </archdesc>
</ead>
