Bill Gossman had a way with clay. Whistling, he'd dig his thumbs into a big hunk of it and, in minutes, form it into an elegant vessel. Then he'd gather friends and fellow artists to stoke the kiln in his backyard, filling its chambers with his work and theirs.
Each of his bowls bore marks not only from his own hands but from the fire they built together.
In this friendly, generous way, he shaped his community, too. As mayor of little New London, Minn., Gossman made the city an arts destination, encouraging artists to set up shop, attracting grants and, in the end, setting the bricks himself.
"You can see his fingerprints all over the town," said Dave Eliason, who played in the Green Lake Bluegrass Band with Gossman. "He used his powers of embracing and welcoming to make people feel heard and to influence them in ways that were positive and to promote growth.
"New London probably saw more growth, more new business, more of everything under his leadership than I've ever experienced in my lifetime."
A beloved mayor and musician, Gossman died May 26 of squamous cell cancer. He was 67.
Residents of the central Minnesota city of 1,250 will remember him as their "harmonica-playing, pottery-creating mayor with a mustache like Water Days cotton candy," as bookstore owner Heather Westberg King once described him.
Growing up in Rochester, Gossman spent time at a nearby creek, clay squishing through his toes. He long wanted to be a potter, remembering "very clearly" the pinch pot he made in kindergarten. After a few years at Mankato State University, he quit and got a job at a production pottery shop, honing his throwing skills.