by Carole Epp | Sep 22, 2009 | call for entry, emerging artist, job posting, monday morning eye candy, movie day, residency opportunity, show us your influences, technical tuesday
Currently on exhibition:
Beyond the Embargo
Cuban and American Ceramics
June 11, 2009– October 18, 2009
“Curated by Catherine Merrill, this exhibition highlights works in clay from a group of prominent Cuban and American artists who, in spite of the continued U.S. Embargo against Cuba, have continued to work and exhibit together in both Cuba and the United States. This collaborative cultural exchange brings together artists from different aesthetic, cultural and technical backgrounds.”
Also check out their upcoming exhibition:
Warren MacKenzie
Legacy of an American Potter
October 31, 2009 – January 3, 2010
“Organized by the Rochester Art Museum, this exhibition of ceramics by Warren MacKenzie presents over 200 works of various styles and approaches, spanning his remarkable 50-year artistic career. He has studied the ceramics of many cultures, particularly Japan, whose forms, glazes and aesthetics can be seen in his work. MacKenzie’s lifelong dedication to utilitarian vessels reflects a worldview where art and life are one. Recognized as a master of 20th Century ceramics, MacKenzie has produced work that is beautiful in a natural way and comfortable in the hand.”
And registration has been extended for:
Clay and Printmaking with Paul Wandless
October 3, 2009 from 10am — 4pm
Learn to use clay surfaces as canvasses with Beyond the Embargo: Cuban and American Ceramics exhibiting artist, Paul Wandless.
Registration ends Thurs., Sept. 24, 2009.
Check out their website for all the details including some employment opportunities like:
MUSEUM EDUCATOR
CUSTOMER SERVICE
ART ASPIRE ASSISTANT
MUSEUM SHOP
OFFICE ASSISTANT
SPECIAL EVENTS
Education Department Seeks Workshop Instructors
MARKETING / PUBLIC RELATIONS INTERN
CURATORIAL INTERN
COLLECTIONS INTERN
REGISTRARIAL INTERN
EDUCATION INTERN: COMMUNITY PROGRAMS
EDUCATION INTERN: PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT
Check out their website for all the details.
Fuller Craft Museum
455 Oak Street
Brockton, MA 02301
t 508-588-6000
f 508-587-6191
by Carole Epp | Sep 17, 2009 | Uncategorized
Friday 18 September 18.00-21.30
Saturday 19 September 10.00-17.30
Sunday 20 September 10.00-17.30
Throughout the V&A
A weekend of special events to celebrate the opening of Phase 1 of the V&A’s new Ceramics galleries. Debate with Edmund de Waal or contribute to The Collection, an installation by Clare Twomey. Watch a kiln being constructed, fired and opened with Thiébaut Chagué, be thrilled and fascinated by the science of ceramics with the Material Library or try throwing, pinching and potting with the London Potters. Hear Willie Harcourt-Cooze talk about chocolate and ceramics and try his special traditional chocolate and truffles; watch Barnaby Barford’s Damaged Goods; see French Fancies, a promenade performance by Debbie Does; or find out how to look after your favourite ceramics from our skilled conservation team.
The Collection, Clare Twomey
Join ceramic artist Clare Twomey as she creates a new, site-specific installation. Fill empty vitrines with cherished memories of ceramic objects. ‘The Collection’ will be a unique display that will grow over the three-day Ceramica event, encouraging understanding of the ceramics collection in terms of everyday objects in the lives’ of people in the past and present.
Clare Twomey is a British artist who works with clay in large-scale installations, sculpture and site-specific works. Over the past 10 years she has exhibited at the Tate, Victoria and Albert Museum, Crafts Council, in the UK and The Museum of Modern Art in Kyoto, Japan. Twomey continues to develop works, that pursue her interest in human behaviour, space, architectural interventions and the gallery as destination.
http://www.claretwomey.com/
Le Soif et la Source (The Thirst and the Well)
Watch ceramic artist Thiébaut Chagué build and fire a site-specific kiln, creating one of his signature pieces in the process. The kiln will be constructed and lit on Friday evening. It will be at full heat on Saturday afternoon, when Chagué plans to open up the kiln Raku-style to show the ceramic object being formed at peak temperature. Finally, the kiln will be left to cool and cracked open on Sunday afternoon to see the final piece emerge.
Thiébaut Chagué has been a practising potter and artist for the past thirty years. His work expresses the soul and the inner void. The pieces are built from the inside in the solitude of the studio and they are fed by the fire outside. The heat, pushes the clay to the limit of its resistance to its potential distruction. This risk taking is necessary for Chagué, by tearing the clay the fire reveals the energy that is contained inside the work.
Dark Chocolate Art
See Willie Harcourt-Cooze and his team demonstrating chocolate making from bean to 18th-century ceramic chocolatière. Savour the flavour of Harcourt-Cooze’s traditional truffles, hot chocolates and specially invented treats to celebrate the V&A’s Ceramica weekend, available to buy and try from the V&A café.
Willie Harcourt-Cooze has been growing cacao for more than a decade at the Hacienda El Tesoro, in the heights of the Henri Pittier National Park in Choroni, Venezuela.
http://www.williescacao.com/
Damaged Goods
See Barnaby Barford’s animation of a tragic love story played out by porcelain figurines with shattering consequences and make a stop-motion animation yourself.
Barnaby Barford is an artist who works with ceramics to create unique narrative pieces. Although an accomplished craftsman,
Barford primarily selects found objects, taking both mass-manufactured and antique figurines and turning them into sinister, sardonic but invariably humorous characters. http://www.barnabybarford.co.uk/
Stop motion (or frame-by-frame) is an animation technique to make a physically manipulated object appear to move on its own. The object is moved in small amounts between individually photographed frames, creating the illusion of movement when the series of frames are played as a continuous sequence.
Basic Ceramic Techniques
Meet the London Potters who will be demonstrating basic ceramic-making techniques from pinch pots and throwing to coiling. London Potters is a voluntary organisation formed in 1986 to provide a forum for the exchange of ideas and experiences of all those involved with or interested in ceramics. It is the only London-based society offering membership to both professional and non-professional ceramicists; all its members are united by the appreciation of ceramic art and a desire to further their knowledge and communicate with fellow ceramic artists and collectors.
http://www.londonpotters.com/
We Are Not Amused
Join our inaugural Ceramics Resident, Stephen Dixon, in creating a large ceramic mosaic of Queen Victoria. Visitors are invited to place pieces of the mosaic itself, and even bring along their own broken ceramics contributions to be included. Professor Stephen Dixon is the V&A’s first Ceramics resident, with a studio built into the Ceramics galleries themselves. Dixon draws on the satirical tradition to make works that are rich in political and contextual detail as well as being masterfully produced objects.
Materials Library Takes On Ceramics
See Materials Library demonstrate the beauty and the science of clay. Materials Library are an interdisciplinary collaborative team that make objects, events and exhibitions. The group is involved in both scientific research and artistic practices that explore the senso-aesthetics of different materials.
http://www.materialslibrary.org.uk/
French Fancies
Take a cheeky peek into the delicate rituals of 18th-century high fashion as Debbie Does brings to life the magnificent temporary exhibition Objects of Luxury in a playful promenade performance blending movement and contemporary dance to celebrate French etiquette of the 18th century from taking tea to la Toilette.
French Fancies is a bespoke performance commissioned by the V&A to celebrate the opening of the new ceramics galleries in our temporary exhibition Objects of Luxury. Produced by Debbie Does and designed by Shanti Freed.
www.debbie-does.co.uk
http://www.myspace.com/shantifreed
Edmund de Waal and Michelle Ogundehin
In Conversation
Hear Edmund de Waal, one of the UK’s foremost contemporary ceramicists and professor of ceramics at the University of Westminster, discussing the nature of contemporary ceramics and design with Michelle Ogundehin, Editor-in-Chief of Elle Decoration.
http://www.edmunddewaal.com/
£8, £6 concessions Book online or call +44 (0)20 7942 2211
Chocolate and Ceramics
A Lifelong Friendship: Explore the journey of chocolate from bean to bar with with Willie Harcourt-Cooze, from Willie’s Cacao on Channel 4. The talk will touch on the development of chocolate consumption in South America and Europe with reference to special ceramic forms that developed as a result. There will be an opportunity for Q&A at the end.
Wilie Harcourt-Cooze has been growing cacao for more than a decade at the Hacienda El Tesoro, in the heights of the Henri Pittier National Park in Choroni, Venezuela.
http://www.williescacao.com/
Ceramics Surgery
Do you have a favourite jug at home that has lost its handle? Drop-in for demonstrations of ceramics conservation and repair from the V&A’s skilled conservation team. Thousands of ceramics were conserved for the new galleries and our team will show a selection of the techniques and object handling that were used. Find Conservation Journal articles on objects in the Ceramics collection here
by Carole Epp | Sep 17, 2009 | Uncategorized
The Ceramics area at University of Manitoba is pleased to announce Tamura Shizuo will be our visiting artist for Fall, 2009.
Tamura will present a studio workshop in the ceramics area of the School of Art at University of Manitoba from September 21-25, 2009.
At the conclusion of the workshop, pots made by Mr. Tamura will be fired in the wood-burning kiln at the U of M from September 28-30. The kiln will be opened on October 5 at 10:00 AM.
The workshop and demonstrations will take place in room 115 of the Ceramics/Sculpture building at the University of Manitoba from 9:30 to 3:30 each day. Mr. Tamura will produce traditional and contemporary pottery from Shigaraki using locally-available materials.
Mr. Tamura will also present a public lecture on his work and on the famous Shigaraki region of Japan on September 24 at 3:30 PM in room 207 of the FitzGerald Building at the University of Manitoba. Following the lecture, a public reception and potluck will take place in the ceramics area.
During the workshop, an exhibition of Mr. Tamura’s ceramic artwork from Japan will be on display at the Mennonite Heritage Centre Gallery on the campus of Canadian Mennonite University. There will be an opening reception and slide presentation at the gallery on Wednesday September 23 at 7:00 PM. Traditional Japanese refreshments will be served during the reception. The Mennonite Heritage Centre Gallery is located at 600 Shaftesbury Blvd., south of Grant Avenue, on the south campus of Canadian Mennonite University. The gallery is open from 8:30 to 4:30 Monday through Friday and Noon to 5:00 PM Saturday.
All events are free and open to the public.
We hope to see you in the ceramics area!
For more information please contact:
Professor Stephen Grimmer, Chair of Ceramics
University of Manitoba
Winnnipeg, MB R3T 2N2
(204) 474-9560
[email protected]
http://ltc.umanitoba.ca/blogs/grimmer
by Carole Epp | Sep 16, 2009 | call for entry, emerging artist, job posting, monday morning eye candy, movie day, residency opportunity, show us your influences, technical tuesday
Submission deadline: October 23. National juried exhibition of all craft media takes place January 23-March 15, 2010. $2,000 in awards. $25 entry fee. For details and application, visit online. Questions? Call 480-644-6567.
by Carole Epp | Sep 15, 2009 | Uncategorized
Medicine Hat –Robert Harrison, the man behind the Historic Clay District’s easily-recognizable sculpture – the Medaltarch – will be speaking at the Medalta Potteries National Historic Site at 5:30pm on Saturday, September 19, as part of Medicine Hat’s celebration of Alberta Arts Days. The Canadian-born artist has gained international attention as a ceramic artist and sculptor. Over the course of his career, Harrison has held many prominent positions in both Canada and the United States. He is the Past-President of the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA), was President of the Board at the Archie Bray Foundation in Helena, Montana and served one year as Head of the Ceramics Department at the Banff Centre for the Arts. Harrison’s sculpture at the Medalta Potteries National Historic Site – the Medaltarch – was created during his time as an artist in the Medalta International Artists in Residence (MIAIR) program in 1999 and is an example of his site-specific sculptures that can be found in Hungary, Italy, Taiwan and other locations around the world. Les Manning, the Artistic Director of the MIAIR program from 2001-2009, is thrilled to have Harrison in Medicine Hat. “As an artist, Robert works outside the norm in that his installations are historic sculpture. Not many ceramic artists challenge this area as much as he or have been as successful in taking it to an international audience.” He encourages people to take the opportunity to hear him speak. “Whenever artists of this magnitude visit Medicine Hat – especially someone with the connection he has [with the Medaltarch] – they are worth hearing.” Saturday, September 19 is a busy day for the Historic Clay District as it celebrates Alberta Arts Days. In addition to Harrison’s talk, the Historic Clay District is also offering free, two-hour pottery classes and a museum open house with hourly demonstrations in the Working Pottery. Anyone interested in hearing Harrison speak or participating in the classes are encouraged to contact the Historic Clay District at 403.529.1070. The Historic Clay District is one of eight tourism attractors in the Canadian Badlands, featured in AMA’s “Alberta 100 Journeys” and is Western Canada’s largest National Historic Site. The museum – in the Medalta Potteries National Historic Site – provides visitors a unique opportunity to visit a restored 1912 pottery factory, which once produced three-quarters of all stoneware in Canada. It is operated under the stewardship of the Friends of Medalta Society. The Medalta International Artists in Residence (MIAIR) program is a world-class ceramic arts residency operated out of the Shaw International Centre for Contemporary Ceramics in Medicine Hat’s Historic Clay District. MIAIR will begin offering year-round artistic programming in 2010, is twelfth year of operation. The program has brought international attention to Medicine Hat and continues the city’s rich clay tradition through contemporary ceramics. For more information, interviews or visuals, contact: