residency opportunity: c.r.e.t.a Rome

CITY OR COUNTRYSIDE? 2017 international artist residencies at c.r.e.t.a. rome
 
We
have just posted the 2017 dates for our short-term residencies in Rome,
Italy. 

Founded in 2012, c.r.e.t.a rome is an international centre for
ceramics and the arts co-founded by American art-historian, Lori-Ann
Touchette and Italian ceramic artist, Paolo Porelli. We offer
residencies in our studio in the historical centre of Rome and also in
the countryside near the lake of Bracciano. The first application
deadline is 1 November 2016. For more info, see our web-site (www.cretarome.com) or contact us at [email protected].

Lori-Ann Touchette and Paolo Porelli

c.r.e.t.a. rome

via dei Delfini, 17

00186 Rome, Italy
+393478024581

www.cretarome.com

www.facebook.com/CretaRome

http://cretarome.blogspot.it

“The Pretty Things Are Going to Hell” at Sculpture Space NYC Projects

Trevor King

 


October
22 – November 19, 2016
Opening
Reception: Saturday, October 22, 6 – 9 PM
Hours:
Saturday 12 – 6 PM and Wednesday 5 – 8 PM
Location:
47-21 35th Street, Long Island City, NY 11101
Sculpture Space NYC Projects is
pleased to present The Pretty Things Are
Going To Hell
, a group exhibition featuring recent sculptural ceramics by
five New York-based artists: Veronica Frenning, Trevor King, Toshiaki Noda,
Sang Joon Park, and Patrice Renee Washington. 
The
Pretty Things Are Going To Hell
honors the idea of a non-utilitarian,
non-traditional vision and experimental approach toward clay. The common
denominator of this show is that each artist in his or her own particular way
explore the simplicity and anomalies that arise from the process, and rethink
the aesthetic values, and ideals of beauty and perfection.
Veronica Frenning works
organically, shaping clay into found objects and presenting these finds as
specimens.  Frenning’s pieces blur the lines between traces of industry,
weathered manmade remnants and fragments of nature.
Trevor King’s Aluminum series
articulates the mysterious inner spaces of ceramic vessels. The works are made
in a series of steps that involve throwing a clay vessel and then using the
thrown pot as the vehicle to cast its own shape.   A wax form made of
the pot’s inside is then cast in aluminum, capturing evidence of throw lines,
or fingerprints made from pushing clay up as it spins on the wheel.  The
resulting objects appear as materials in flux – melting, pouring, drying, and
dissolving.
Toshiaki Noda’s works are
created on the wheel and altered so that the clay reveals its responses to the
gesture marks left by Noda’s hands. The exaggerated surfaces and entire shapes
are formed while manipulating the clay’s centrifugal force into Noda’s
aesthetic form.
Sang Joon Park has the
foundations of a trained traditional Korean potter.  Through the
repetition of throwing clay vessels, Sang Joon takes collectively thousands of
bowls and transforms them into sculptural towers. 
Patrice Renee Washington
creates relationships within the “realm of cultural space,” setting
up scenarios between objects that are seemingly functional whilst addressing
concepts of the “primitive and modes of convenience.”
Sculpture Space NYC is a
ceramics and sculpture center designed to foster creativity, concept and
collaboration. SSNYC’s intent is to be a resource for artists, providing space,
equipment, advanced education and opportunities for exhibitions and
residencies. New York City based artists Andrew Kennedy and Magda Dejose founded
SSNYC in 2014.
Patrice Renee Washington

Sang Joon Park

Toshiaki Noda

For more information, please contact
Sculpture Space NYC / Projects at 718-806-1709 or [email protected]