Ronnie Watt: Reading a negotiation and expression of identity in South African Ceramics – Lecture

The North-West Ceramics Foundation is pleased to announce Dr. Ronnie Watt as their next speaker for their Speakers Series. Dr. Watt will present via Zoom on Sunday, February 27, 2022, 11 am Pacific Time. This daytime presentation will allow interested parties from Europe and Africa to attend. All are welcome, but registration is required. Please see here or below to register for this exciting talk.
Dr. Ronnie Watt is a collector and specialist researcher of South African studio pottery and studio ceramic art. He is a graduate and postgraduate of the University of South Africa. His Master’s dissertation addressed South African studio pottery of the later twentieth century and its Anglo-Oriental label. The focus of his PhD was a contextual history of South African ceramics of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. He has published numerous articles on South African studio pottery. After retiring from his career as journalist and producer of television programmes, he emigrated from South Africa to Canada in 2015 and is now resident in Nanaimo on Vancouver Island where he continues his research and writing.
Dr. Watt’s lecture will discuss what is a distinctive feature of South African ceramic art, the expression of identity within a multi-cultural society. Contemporary ceramics produced by both white and black ceramists reveal the practice of cultural referencing to be a conscious engagement with issues of identities, values and meanings, which are expressed as complex symbolism and metaphor in the visual vocabulary. The lecture will refer to works by 20th and 21st century South African ceramists such as Maggie Mikula, Andile Dyalvane, S’bonelo Thau Luthuli, and Michelle Legg.
To register for this talk, please register (free of charge) here:

Michael Simon Studio Pottery Fellowship

Haystack is pleased to steward a new fellowship fund celebrating the life of renowned potter, Michael Simon (1947-2021), who passed away last August after a long illness. Michael taught and met many other artists at Haystack. He recognized that the special environment at the School could be sustaining and even life-changing, and designated Haystack as the recipient of memorial gifts.
In honor of his wish, the Michael Simon Studio Pottery Fellowship is being established by friends and family. The fellowship honors and celebrates his life—his powerful teaching and work—by giving others the opportunity that was transformative to so many artists over the years. Once fully funded, the fellowship will annually provide tuition, room, and board, plus $500 in travel assistance for a mid-career functional potter to attend a ceramics workshop at Haystack. Individuals will be selected through the annual Haystack scholarship review process and the fellowship will be awarded each summer.
To support the Michael Simon Studio Pottery Fellowship, donations can be made using Haystack’s secure online form: https://secure.lglforms.com/form…/s/I0Jbfx_NLoQUohwdZQunoQ
For more information about Michael Simon, archives, and this initiative to establish the fellowship visit the Ferrin Contemporary website: https://ferrincontemporary.com/portfolio/michael-simon/
Images:
1) Michael Simon, by D. Hayne Bayless
2) Michael Simon’s work by John Polak, courtesy of Ferrin Contemporary.

call for Studio Assistantships @ Penland

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Studio assistants are students who assist instructors and are responsible for maintaining the school’s standards for studio operation. They receive housing and meals and pay only a $5 application fee in Slideroom and a $25 non-refundable processing fee if selected.

Studio assistants are selected based on their knowledge of a working studio. In addition to 25–40 hours of work each week, studio assistants are required to work from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM on the day before their session and may have some work to do on Friday after the session is over. Clay studio assistants have a work assignment on Saturday morning after the session and stay on campus Friday night.

Summer 2022

See a full list of workshops offered HERE. Please apply using the scholarship application form on Slideroom by 11:59 PM ET on February 17, 2022.

Note: we cannot accept applications from studio assistants who are not US citizens unless they have current documents authorizing them to work in the US.

Studio Assistantships

Representing Craft/Crafting Representation: DHS Dialogues: Crafting Labour

Representing Craft/Crafting Representation: DHS Dialogues: Crafting Labour

Thu, 20 January 2022 13:30 – 15:00 CST

About this event

How has craft been represented through a variety of media? What impact does representation through the particularities of images, films, spoken and written words, digital platforms have on how craft is practiced and understood? To what extent do representations focus upon materials, tools, practices, makers, environments? How has the dialogue between craft and representation informed the transmission of craft skills? How has the mediation of craft informed its status within debates about heritage and identity? In what ways might translation across particular modalities of communication resonate distinctly locally, transnationally, globally? How has the representation of craft been mobilised to generate or to problematise consumption?

This series features speakers worldwide and across the widest possible range of disciplines and career stages who are thinking critically about intersections between craft and representation. 10-minute presentations in English illustrated by a single PowerPoint slide will generate a dialogue amongst all participants. These dialogues will be ‘live’ via Zoom on alternate Thursdays at 19.30 hrs GMT from 20 January – 31 March 2022. Please visit our listings page for the full programme here.

This week’s session is themed CRAFTING LABOUR

Access event via ZOOM: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87686329779

Jesse Adams Stein – Rethinking representations of industrial craft: Beyond the nostalgic “lost craftsman.”

While recent years have seen a flourishing of intellectual energy directed towards a wide range of craft practices, industrial craft – that is, craft skill undertaken as paid labour in industrial and manufacturing settings – has received less attention. The familiar image of the “lost craftsman” remains a lingering and problematic historical trope. In this rendering, the skilled industrial craftsperson is often cast as a tragic and redundant figure, mere collateral damage amid supposedly inevitable economic, technological and political forces associated with deindustrialisation. While this representation captures some of the profound disruption that was inflicted upon industrial craft labour throughout the second half of the twentieth century, it does not fully account for the gendered, class-based and material complexity of industrial craftspeople’s everyday experiences of economic restructuring, of digitisation and of the neoliberalisation of global labour. Furthermore, it does not capture the ongoing nature of some aspects of industrial craft practice. There is a great deal more to explore, in terms of uncovering and reassessing the buried connections between design culture and industrial production, particularly at the level of everyday human experience.

In this presentation (and in their research more broadly) Adams Stein attempts to avoid these ‘rose-tinted’ representations. Instead, they engage closely with the lives of skilled manufacturing workers (men and women) in Australia, from industries such as steelmaking, automotive design and manufacturing, plastics production and industrial model-making. Drawing from oral histories and ethnographic fieldwork, Adams Stein focuses on detailed life stories and attends to the material specificity of industrial craft practice, from the shop floor to the home-workshop. This has enabled understandings about the ways in which apprenticeship, gendered-work relations, family structure, retraining and technologies have each shaped the skills, identities and creative practices of industrial craftspeople.

Dr Jesse Adams Stein is a Senior Lecturer and Australian Research Council DECRA Fellow at the UTS School of Design, Sydney. Stein is a design researcher and oral historian whose work shifts between historical and contemporary contexts and focuses on the quieter and less fashionable sides of design: industrial craft, manufacturing, repair, skill loss and labour relations in the face of economic and technological change. She is the author of Industrial Craft in Australia (Palgrave Macmillan 2022), and Hot Metal: Material Culture & Tangible Labour (Manchester UP 2016).

Anita Puig – ‘Inherited stitches. Journal of an anonymous seamstress.’

This abstract examines from a historical and heritage perspective, the unwritten language of sewing: a representation, a feminine practice, and as an instructive tool to massively educate women in Chile. Through this abstract, universal language, illiterate women and girls who attended technical schools, could discuss and interchange techniques, experiences, transforming it into a tool for economical independence, a mean to organize women outside their houses and helped them to gain a voice to support women rights through a trade union newspaper led by Esther Valdés de Díaz the founder of the Asociación de Costureras (Seamstresses Association) where they posted samples from their work.

Traces, kept in journals and notebooks portray not only a long term tradition of women, crafts and treatises, but also refer to a complete period of time in the Education of Women, the opening of the first Technical Schools in Chile. These schools promoted by the state can be found since 1888 in Santiago and lasted until the 1970´s when schools shifted to new educational methods. Within this educational method, household economy was organized, and fostered the approach for women to join the workforce and industrialization. The study of these fragments, that belonged to an anonymous woman, reveal traces of her life and a deep interest in protecting a language that will be inherited by their daughters or peers. The visual representation exceeds the written language, and the dissonance between a poor written text and a well executed sample or stitch is evident in this journal. The technique, the executer and the representation become one voice in this period of time, and defined a mode of making, learning and activism.

Anita Puig Gómez was born in Santiago, Chile and is an Architect, currently finishing their Phd in Architecture and Urban Studies at Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile. Puig’s interest topic, as well as their dissertation, has focused on History and Architectural Theory, with particular interest on Modern Architecture, interiors and women studies. Puig has also developed research regarding the cultural and spatial connections between interiors, clothes and architecture.

Courtney Schum – ‘A Trading Space: Realist Images of the Worker in Carved Timber Reliefs at Copenhagen’s Workers’ Assembly Hall, 1934-35.’

This presentation will discuss a set of 14 timber relief panels featuring Danish crafts- and tradespeople in the former Worker’s Assembly Hall on Rømersgade 22, now a preserved museum object at the centre of Copenhagen’s Arbejdermuseet (Worker’s Museum). This space was the first of its kind in the city, purpose built to offer a shared meeting and social space for Copenhagen’s trade unions. Opened in 1879, it features parquet floors, marble, and gilding, generally emulating sumptuous bourgeois aesthetics. However, the installation of these reliefs marks a critical shift towards the incorporation of realist representations of the Danish worker to Copenhagen’s built environment.

The reliefs were installed between 1934 and 1935 by unemployed members of the Carvers’ Union. Each panel displays 1-2 individuals with the tools and products of their craft, in the act of working. They are carpenters, shoemakers, tobacco workers, metal smiths, bakers, servers, masons, plumbers, typographers, bookbinders, tailors, and textile workers—time-resistant professions involving physical labour, heavy machinery, and high technical ability. Their clothes are accurate to the time and work shown. The reliefs’ rough, unpainted surfaces bare evidence of the carving tools, the timber’s materiality, and maker’s hand.

The reliefs sit in juxtaposition to the hall’s refined ceramic ceiling tiles from 1907, which feature only female figures awash in an Italianate and Jugendstil pastiche. Dressed in anachronistic historical costume, they are intended to represent painting, upholstery, and smithery. They hold symbols of the product of trade, but neither their clothing nor their physicality evidence any labour. These tiles show a romanticised concept of work. The carved reliefs, by contrast, show the worker, and therefore are critical artefacts in the history of workers’ visual culture in 20th-century Denmark, which increasingly rejected bourgeois aesthetics in favour of realist self-representation and exultation of trade, industry, and craft.

Courtney Schum is in her 3rd year of a PhD in History of Art at University of Bristol under the supervision of Professor Mike O’Mahony. Schum is interested in 20th-century European design and architecture, theories of place and urbanism, and the material culture of welfare systems. Using architecture, public art, graphic design, sculpture, printed material, and film, her thesis, A Meeting Place for All: The Folkets Hus and Visual Culture of Danish Social Democracy assesses expressions of Danish social democratic attitudes emerging from the workers’ assembly buildings of Copenhagen.

Register HERE.