District 10 Como Community Council

Know Your Como: Mary Jo Schmith

Know Your Como: Mary Jo Schmith

By Sonjie Johnson

Drawing inspiration from nature found as close as Como Park, or her lake country hometown of Wadena, MN, Mary Jo Schmith creates unique, stoneware dinner, serving ware and commissioned tile installations at Front Avenue Pottery & Tile Co. in South Como. Fish, wolves, birds, bear and other wildlife move through trees, skies and water, artistically depicting nature at its most evocative. The studio’s work is food, oven, microwave and dishwasher safe.

One might not expect to find this nationally juried and award- winning, clay artist on Front Avenue in the South Como, District 10 neighborhood. But here she is, and when I sat down with her recently, she told an unusual story.

Mary Jo comes from a family of entrepreneurs – both of her parents were self-employed; her mother was an accountant; her father owned a Ford Implement Dealership. The family’s German heritage included functional art – quilting, baking, sewing – and a strong belief in creations that were useful in the world. With a BFA diploma from the University of Minnesota, and a love of working with raw clay, Mary Jo opened her first studio in NE Minneapolis, in 1989.

By 1992, Mary Jo was a single mother with a young daughter, looking for a living space and a much larger studio that allowed her to install the needed gas kilns and expanded work space. She found them both and talked herself into a long shot loan and a 5-year mortgage at 895 Front Avenue in St. Paul. Front Avenue Pottery & Tile company was born. The rest was history and a lot of hard work. Today, her daughter is grown and on her own and Mary Jo’s design and clay work production business includes three employees, an annual national exhibit schedule and representation in 20 or more fine craft or retail galleries.

It typically takes several processes to create a pottery piece. Mary Jo formulates &
makes her own food-safe glazes of ground earth oxides suspended in water. The
glazes are dipped, hand brushed or airbrushed in decorative motifs, often repeated in sets, each piece unique. Many hours of drawings precede the final product, which Mary Jo creates for each clay work series. Most pieces are wheel thrown, although some are hand built from rolled clay. Dinner sets, cups, bowls, serving plates and casseroles – her inventory is wide and varied. Several years ago, she added pho bowls to her stock.

With an open-door policy, Front Avenue Pottery & its retail gallery is open to visitors during studio working hours, M-F, 9am- 5pm, and gladly by appointment.  There are times when the studio is closed, exhibiting elsewhere, picking up supplies or just “gone fishing”.  Mary Jo encourages people to just stop in to browse or ask questions. Calling ahead is always a good idea.

Mary Jo’s stoneware has won juried prizes at numerous art shows and exhibits, and has been purchased by national retailers such as Yellowstone National Park, Cold Water Creek and Caribou Coffee. Galleries in four + states show her work. She will load 24 tubs of pottery in a van and travel most weekends May – August, attending various shows and exhibits. The week we met, Mary Jo was headed to Iowa City for the Iowa Arts Festival, June 2-4. Summer exhibits & gallery sales, such as those at the Lake Superior Trading Post, are very seasonal, so summer is her busiest season! A quote on her website best describes her philosophy of clay art, which, like farming, Mary Jo calls a lifestyle.

“A love for the beauty of craft, the science of raw material & the unpredictable forces of fire keep every pot a new challenge!”
Website: www.frontavepotteryandtile.com