Jasna Sokolovic: new project: Finders-Keepers: magnetic tags


The following is from her website:

Inspiration: This project came as result of my ongoing thoughts about 3d graffiti, urban interventions, animated streets, self-promotion and of course love.

Title: The project is called ‘Finders-Keepers”, inspired by a nine-year-old’s vernacular.

Description: Up to 200 ceramic hearts will be dispersed across Granville Island, on the upcoming weekend and will be waiting for you to pick one up.
If you find it, take it, keep it for yourself or give it to someone who will cherish the love.
Each tag has my web address–if they inspire you, please send me an email, comment or photo.

Image: Ceramic magnetic hearts

Location: Granville Island

Launch date: February 11th 2011,

End date: Unknown

Artist of the Day: Patty Bilbro



@font-face { font-family: “Calibri”; }p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal { margin: 0cm 0cm 10pt; line-height: 115%; font-size: 11pt; font-family: “Times New Roman”; }div.Section1 { page: Section1; } Patty Bilbro is a studio potter living and working in the mountains of Western North Carolina. She fires to cone 10 in a gas reduction kiln. Using simple forms as a palette Patty combines brushwork illustrations with a layering of multiple shinos to create snapshot narratives. Loving everything hand-made she is continually humbled by the knowledge, creativity, humor and talent that surround her.www.pattybilbrofoxfirepottery.com
www.PattyBilbro.blogspot.com

GICBiennale 2011: International Competition

Ceramic artists from across the world are invited to the Gyeonggi International Ceramix Biennale 2011.
The biennale, which will start on September 23, 2011 and run for 30 days, will be staged in three cities of Gyeonggi Province – the heart and soul of Korean ceramics.

Since 2001, the World Ceramic Biennale Korea (CEBIKO) has become a major international art festival for ceramic artists. Now we embark on a new adventure for decade ahead, taking up challenges along the way. To celebrate the change and innovation we have achieved since becoming the Korea Ceramic Foundation we proudly announce our Ceramix Art Festival. Here all genres of art will join with the world of ceramics under the theme ‘Journey from Fire’, and together will seek a new vision of ceramic art internationally.

This biennale will bring us together for a special journey into our collective imagination. In this journey, hearts and minds of creative people from across the globe will be united as one: ‘clay’ as the medium, and passion for creation will be the ‘fire’. We hope that this grand design will establish a new and important aspect of mass culture, enabling artists – and art aficionados – to realize a new form of integrated and visionary communication.

With a view to supporting ceramic artists around the world, the Korea Ceramic Foundation (KOCEF) also has in train plans to create art parks in the three Gyeonggi Province cities of Icheon, Yeoju, and Gwangju. Works by artists participating in the biennale will be permanently exhibited at these parks, which in turn will become a sort of ceramic utopia: Cerapia.

International Deadline: May 31, 2011 – The Korea Ceramic Foundation (KOCEF) would like to announce the Gyeonggi International Ceramix Biennale 2011 International Competition call for entries. Open to ceramic artists the world over.

The International Competition, one of the main parts of the biennale, has been a dynamic forum where the latest issues facing contemporary ceramics are explored since 2001. In the previous competition in 2009, we received big attention the world over; 1,726 artists from 70 countries submitted 3,196 artworks.

The events will be held for 30 days from September 24, 2011.

International Competition 2011 Eligibility
Open to ceramic artists the world over. Works in collaboration with other genres are all welcome but the majority of the works should be ceramic.

Awards
The winners of the competition will receive the large cash prizes. Total: KRW 223,000,000 ($193,900)/ Grand Prize: KRW 50,000,000 ($43,500)

Submissions
Submission of Images for Preliminary Screening, from April 1 to May 31, 2011

Only online submissions will be acceptable. (www.kocef.org) Digital images of the work, minimum 1,100 pixels wide in jpeg format are necessary. A single entry should be – when displayed – within these specified dimensions: 250cm (width); 250cm (depth); 250cm (height).

Submission of Actual Works for Final Selection, from July 21 to August 15, 2011.

At the final selection, all prizewinners will be determined. All entries that make it to the final round of screening may not be awarded. In this case, these works will be returned by KOCEF.

We invite you to let your imagination and creativity run wild!

Apply-online.

For Inquiries

Korea Ceramic Foundation Biennale Secretariat
406 Gwango-dong, Icheon-si Gyeonggi-do 467-020
Republic of Korea
Tel: +82 31 645 0682 / 645 0687
Fax: +82 31 631 1614
Webpage : www.kocef.org

via ArtDeadline.Com

Do you know Canada’s Top Young Professional under 40 who has done amazing work for the arts?

Deadline for nominations: MAR 30 If so, here’s your opportunity to nominate him or her for one of Canada’s most prestigious awards for volunteerism in the arts: The Arnold Edinborough Award.

The Arnold Edinborough Award recognizes an individual young professional under the age of 40 who has demonstrated exceptional leadership and volunteerism in the arts. The Arnold Edinborough Award winner receives a unique work of art and $5,000 to donate to the arts organization(s) of his or her choice. The award is presented at the Business for the Arts Awards Gala and a separate party is held in honour of the winner. Nominations for the 2011 Arnold Edinborough Award are open! The nomination deadline is March 30th, 2011.

For more details and nomination forms, please visit the Business for the Arts website.
Click here to nominate
via Alberta Craft Council

Artist of the Day: Petra Bittl


On Petra Bittl’s work One of mankind’s oldest cultural skills has experienced a renaissance in recent decades. Experimentation, the exploration of new innovative technical avenues and the interpretation of trends in contemporary sculpture and forms have raised ceramic art to a level that increasingly achieves recognition in today’s art world. Renowned national and international artists, painter or sculptors have accepted the challenge of unlocking the creative potential of fired earth and discover “ceramics”. Petra Bittl is one of these young artists who find their artistic expression in this genre.

Petra Bittl’s creative output has its origins in the intensive relationship between sketching, painting and clay. The aesthetic integration of sculpture and image transcend the pure form of the object. An alloy of form and content is forged within the ceramic sculpture itself, its porcelain epidermis a surrogate for canvas or paper. Drawings and pictorial elements define the sculptural form and detail both content and meaning with facet-rich autonomous stylistic idiom in each sculptural object. Petra Bittl’s sculptural approach defines itself primarily via the line as the essential element of form, graphic and structure. Lines structure her surfaces and animate forms and colours; they vibrate with the material’s own lively surface. They permeate and characterize the surface of the objects or guide the eye from the second into the third dimension as an extension of malleable design, thus encapsulating their environment. Ceramics as a medium gives the artist a wide-ranging freedom in determining the style of the lines, lines that are created by glaze painting techniques, sgraffito or the use of differently coloured clays – white porcelain on a base of almost pure black clay, as an example. Pure white finely textured porcelain stands in animated contrast to the coarsely grained coloured clays; the line determines the externality of the form, interrupting the harmony of the surfaces. Likewise, their fluid structure sets in motion the viewer’s perception, opening the object’s expressive potential.

The body of work represented by the porcelain tile defines the ceramic form as a primed surface and a medium for painting and sketching – a canvas or a sheet of paper. Tiles, familiar decorative and functional elements and infinitely reproducible in industrial processes, cast off their utilitarianism and are given an artistic meaning. They reveal abstract pictorial worlds that grapple with nature or with the decoration itself. Using a pate de verre technique (comparable to the monotype process), Petra Bittl creates layers of drawings and graphic elements on a gypsum block and then transfers them to porcelain. Unique works are created, because the process rules out reproduction. The properties of the ceramic material, however, again give the artist the freedom to combine it with plastic structures, additional objects or apertures.



The open hollow forms may at first glance appear ambivalent. Borrowing elements from the classic vessel form, they reveal themselves as fabric-robed human forms, striding or resting, singly or in pairs, dominating their environment. Here again, the use of lines, ligatures and constrictions structure the figures and express movement and tranquillity. The finely structured relief-like surfaces, however, give the ceramic material a new characteristic, not inherent in its natural state – a textile materiality and flowing softness.
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Petra Bittl’s artistic interest also manifests itself in a balancing act between ceramics’ stability and its fragility. Lines weave themselves with great sensitivity and conceptional calculation into shapes, endowing the solid clay medium with a powerful lightness. Strands and apertures filter the light and draw the viewer deep into the object. The contours of the surface become consciously tangible through the interplay of light and shade. The hard material appears soft and endearing. The artistic influence – as in all her work – is evident, be it the characteristic style of the formative hand or the revelation of principles of technical design.
Petra Bittl has consciously chosen an artistic direction in the sense of aesthetic material research in her work with ceramics and the process of crafts production. Her work does not draw its integrity and style from the development of new techniques, but rather from pushing the envelope of the ceramic material and its close relationship with drawing and painting. Translation: John Burland p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal { margin: 0cm 0cm 0.0001pt; font-size: 12pt; font-family: “Times New Roman”; }div.Section1 { page: Section1; } www.petra-bittl.de