Call for entry – Young Ceramists Tile Competition

INTERNATIONAL PARTICIPATION YOUNG CERAMISTS TILE COMPETITION AIM OF COMPETITION To support young ceramists, increase cultural partition and contribute to contemporary ceramic art within the annual Spring Festival organized by Usak University. THEME OF COMPETITION Free. COMPETITION CONDITIONS

  • Associate degree, undergraduate, graduate degree and Arts Proficiency (doctorate) students of ceramics and tile departments of University Academies and Fine Arts Faculties and equivalent Faculties in Turkey and abroad can participate.
  • The size must be 15X15 cm and the thickness must be 1 to 5 cm.
  • The works must be fired and glazed.
  • The participant’s work will adjust to ceramic techniques and materials. Pieces with less than %80 ceramic work will not be accepted.
  • Each participant can participate with only one piece.
  • Name, last name or signature must be on the right corner of the tile not to exceed 3×1 cm.
  • The works will not be returned.
  • The tiles selected after the evaluation of the Jury will be exhibited on the wall built in Usak University 1 Eylul Campus ‘Art Park’.
  • The back sides of the tiles must be designed to be mounted on the wall.

PARTICIPATION

  • The participants must fill the attached form in full and send or deliver it with the work until April 05 2010 to the mentioned address.
  • 300 dpi jpeg formatted picture of the work must be e-mailed or sent with the work.
  • The participants may follow their application from our web address.

AWARDS

  • Success Award – 1000,00 TL + Plaque + Success Certificate + catalogue
  • Special Jury Award – 750,00 TL + Plaque + Success Certificate + catalogue
  • Youth Award ( Café Lâl / Adem YALCIN ) – 750,00 TL + Plaque + Success Certificate + catalogue
  • Personal and Corporation Awards

* Participation Certificate and catalogue will be given to the artists who pass the jury evaluation and did not receive an award. RESULTS AND EVALUATION The Jury will meet and evaluate on Wednesday, April 07 2010 in Usak University Fine Arts Faculty. The results of the competition and date of award ceremony will be announced in Usak University web site. The tiles awarded and selected will be exhibited on the I. International Young Ceramists Tile Competition wall built in Usak University 1 Eylul Campus ‘Art Park’.and the awards will be handed at the opening and award ceremony. DELIVERY The works must be delivered in person or sent by post or freight until April 05 2010 Monday to Usak University. The responsibility of delay and damage cased in post or freight will not be accepted. For more info check out the website or contact at the following:Address: Usak Universitesi, Guzel Sanatlar Fampusu, 64200 USAK/TURKIYETelephone: 0.276.263 43 26 – 40 82
Email: [email protected]

Artist of the Day: Rob Froese


Speaking of the wonders of Medicine Hat, today is another example of an artist who has worked at the Medalta AIR (I promise I’m not getting a commission for speaking so highly of Medalta) and who has since been returning to fire more gorgeous work in their soda kiln. I love the range, yet cohesion of the design elements in Rob’s work. And I can assure you that they are even more lovely to behold in person. Today’s artist is yet again more proof of the high quality of work found on the Canadian prairies.



Artist Statement:
Working with texturing and layering techniques, I make ceramic tableware (cups, bowls, slab plates) that is both sculptural and utilitarian.



Living in Japan for 11 years in close contact with Japanese culture and culinary customs has had a great influence on my life and work. Mainly, this experience has made me more aware of the importance of clay colour and texture in pottery in relation to the tactile experience of using a dish. Experimenting with local clays in Japan, Mexico and in my native Saskatchewan, as well as using prepared clays, I have centered my interest on the way the qualities of a particular clay and slip inspire surface form and function.




photos: Gabriela Garcia-Luna

Artist of the Day: Elizabeth Burritt

Well if you haven’t already spent your last earnings on boxing day blowout sales you should consider stopping by Elizabeth’s etsy shop for some gorgeous ceramic jewelery. I’m so tempted….and I’m starting to wonder what is in the water in Medicine Hat as there is so much incredible work being produced there. I’d love to see these pieces in person as I’m sure the imagery is even more stunning in person.


Elizabeth Burritt is an artist and designer who has had the good fortune in the last 3 years to live by the ocean, in the mountains and on the prairie. Her practice includes such media as ceramics, textiles and graphic design and has come to involve creating human life in a recent collaborative project. She currently lives with her husband, daughter and dog in Medicine Hat, Alberta.

“My ceramic practice includes vessel making, sculpture and most recently jewelry. It’s heavily weighted toward surface considerations. Most pieces are made of unglazed porcelain with hand-drawn, monochromatic decoration. The imagery on my work comes from my immediate environment and has transitioned from urban to rural accordingly.”
etsy link: elizabethburritt.etsy.com
(Congrats on that “collaborative project”, Elizabeth. I’m sure it’s keeping you busy!)

Artist of the Day: Michael Angelotti

I really encourage you to go and check out Michael’s website to get a more complete sense of his amazing work and process. The following images simply scratch the surface. Very cool indeed. There are some incredible macro shots of kiln formed crystals which I just love. I once did a series of ceramic works that I exhibited as macro photographs of the surface, but they don’t hold a candle to Michael’s work. Enjoy!

Images: 1 & 2: Dissolving Tendencies. 2009. Ceramic, Wood, Steel. 40” x 15” x 36”

Statement: At our disposal are all the minerals of the universe, as they exist here on planet earth. The combination and recombination of these minerals into objects can only be limited by human imagination and vision. Through explorations in material, surface, and idea, I create works that are reflections on the beauty and power of the objects and textures that compose the natural world.

3&4: Entropic Adulation. 2008. Ceramic. 8ft in Diameter
My intentions are not to copy verbatim these forms and surfaces, but to use the energy they possess as a catalyst for expression and creativity. To create something beautiful and the start to finish process rooted in an idea, serves as a means of fulfillment and joy in my life.

5 & 6: Specimens. 2008. Ceramic, Wood, Glass, LED Lighting.
Piece consists of 48 individually lighted jars with a ceramic sculpture in each jar.
Each Jar measures 3 ½ inches in Diameter.

Bio: Just an everyday guy living the life I love. While pursuing a degree in Art History at Edinboro University, artist Steven Kemenyffy turned me on to ceramics and since then, it’s been my life’s work. After completing school with a degree in Art History, I continued to work closely with Steve in his studio where we wrote and received a grant for an exhibit called Terra Nova that was featured at the 2008 NCECA conference in Pittsburgh. In summer 2008, I was the studio assistant at Peters Valley Craft Center in Layton, NJ and directly after went to The Wichita Center for the Arts in Wichita, KS to be there artist in residence for a year. Now I am back in my hometown of Erie, Pennsylvania where my good friend (a lamp worker) and I have opened up a working studio and sales gallery called ‘Interglasstic Studios.’ We now work fulltime- creating artwork and promoting young, local artisans like ourselves.

Website: www.mikeangelotti.com

Artist of the Day: Tracey Broome

Well I do hope that each and everyone of you are having a wonderful holiday season however you choose to celebrate it. I am finally in relax mode, no work for me for a few days at least, well that is except for sharing more beautiful work with you all. Enjoy today’s eye candy hopefully you haven’t filled up on too many treats so far today!


BIO:

“I am a clay artist living in Chapel Hill, N.C. I combine wheel throwing and hand building in my work and fire Raku and cone 10 reduction. I teach hand building and Raku classes at the Artscenter in Carrboro N.C. and sell my work in local galleries and art festivals. In 2008 the Orange County Arts Commission awarded me an artists project grant for a gas/raku kiln. I have been experimenting with raku glazes for the past year and in August of 2009 I attended a Raku workshop at Penland with Steven Forbes deSoule. The metal stand for the pear was found outside the metal shop at Penland and the chartreuse glaze was a glaze we experimented with during the workshop. Chartreuse glaze Raku fired to 1950 f in an Olympic torchbearer gas/raku kiln”

Also check out Tracey’s blog for more gorgeous work and info about her practice www.tsbroome.blogspot.com.