LAST CALL: Applications due for Summer 2014 residencies at c.r.e.t.a. rome 1 March 2014

 The non-profit organization  ‘c.r.e.t.a. rome’ is offering
an international self-funded residency program in Rome, Italy. The
Italian word for clay seemed perfect to express our commitment to
creating an international reference point for ceramics and the arts
in the eternal city of Rome. Moreover, taken as an acronym, it spells
out our main activities: ceramics, residencies, exhibitions,
teaching and the arts.  We are located in the mid 16th-century
Palazzo Delfini in the historical center of Rome, just blocks from
the Capitoline Hill on one side and the Pantheon on the other.

We offer artist residencies for ceramicists and visual artists for
periods of 4 to 6 weeks (or 3 months: if you are interested you can
extend your residency period into our Fall session). The residency
includes a semi-private equipped studio, housing in the historical
center of Rome, and technical assistance in procuring materials,
firings, etc., advice on museums, galleries and sites in Rome and
beyond. Artists have the opportunity to focus on their art, whether it
be creating a new body of work, expanding a well-established oeuvre
or allowing themselves to draw inspiration from their surroundings
and the centuries of culture that define the eternal city. In
addition, they will have access to the wealth of galleries and
exhibitions in Rome and beyond. Artists will have an opportunity to
present a proposal for a final exhibition of the works produced during
the residency period.

We are also offering a residency in the countyside near Bracciano,
with private accommodation in a 1-bedroom house with a garden and a
private studio. This option is particulary atractive for ceramic artists
who work with reduction firing and/or collaborative projects.

A selection committee composed of artists, art critics and historians
carefully evaluates applicants based on their artistic experience,
merit and project proposal. For more info and costs, contact Lori-Ann
Touchette, [email protected] or see our web-site:
www.cretarome.com.

SUMMER residency periods: 1-30 JUNE, 1 JULY-11 AUGUST 2014

To apply, please submit the following by e-mail to [email protected] by 1 March 2014:

    curriculum vitae

    artist statement (250 words max)

    project proposal (500 words max)​​

    10 images (jpeg or pdf) and an image list with year, materials and dimensions

    preferred residency period

3 calls for entry: Clay Arts Vegas


CUP SHOW
Las Vegas Nevada’s Clay Arts Vegas is pleased to host “CUP SHOW” a
national juried art exhibition, May 1 – May 31, 2014 in the Victor F.
Keen Gallery, at Clay Arts Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada. “CUP SHOW”
will feature functional and sculptural cups, tea bowls and mugs.

Deadline: April 1, 2014. Participation is open to all artists 18 years
of age or older living in the United States and Canada. Work submitted
must be original, must use clay as the primary material, must specify
firing technique(s) and size, and must have been completed within the
last 2 years.

Awards
There will be a $100 award for best of show.

Entry Requirements and Procedures
An artist may enter up to 3 works, up to 2 images per work.
There is a non-refundable jury fee of $10 per work entered, payable by
credit card or check.

Images must be JPEG, at 300 dpi (suggested minimums: 800 pixels in
either direction, with maximum file size of 1.0 MB). Each JPEG image
must be titled with the artist’s last name, first name, entry number,
and “detail” if you are including a detail image.

http://www.clayartsvegas.com/assets/images/cupshow2014.pdf

SERVE IT UP 2014
Las Vegas Nevada’s Clay Arts Vegas is pleased to host
“SERVE IT UP”  a national juried art exhibition, July 1 – Aug 29, 2014
in the Victor F. Keen Gallery, at Clay Arts Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada.
“SERVE IT UP” will feature plates, platters, bowls, casseroles, and
other functional tableware.
Deadline: June 10, 2014. Participation is open to all artists 18 years
of age or older living in the United States and Canada. Work submitted
must be original, must use clay as the primary material, must specify
firing technique(s) and size, and must have been completed within the
last 2 years

Awards
There will be a $200 award for best of show.

Entry Requirements and Procedures
An artist may enter up to 3 works, up to 2 images per work.
There is a non-refundable jury fee of $10 per work entered, payable by
credit card or check.
Images must be JPEG, at 300 dpi (suggested minimums: 800 pixels in
either direction, with maximum file
size of 1.0 MB). Each JPEG image must be titled with
the artist’slast name, first name,entry number, and “detail” if
you are including a detail image

WHAT GOES BUMP IN THE NIGHT 2014
Clay Arts Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada is pleased to host “WHAT GOES BUMP
IN THE NIGHT 2014″
an annual national juried art exhibition, October 1 –October 31 at the
Victor F. Keen Gallery in Las Vegas,
Nevada. “What Goes Bump In The Night” will feature that which
captures the art of the sublime, creepy,
scary, things that make your skin crawl and captures the pain of
personal suffering: there are many things in
life that go bump in the night some physical some emotional and some
psychological. All work will use
clay as the primary medium and capture what we fear in the dark.

Deadline: September 2, 2014.
Participation is open to all artists 18 years of age or older living in
the
United States and Canada. Work submitted must be original, must use clay
as the primary material, must
specify firing technique(s) and size, and must have been completed
within the last 2 years.

There will be a $200 award for best of show.

Entry Requirements and Procedures
An artist may enter up to 3 works, up to 2 images per work.
There is a non-refundable jury fee of $10 per work entered, payable by
credit card or check.
Images must be JPEG, at 300 dpi (suggested minimums: 800 pixels in
either direction, with maximum file
size of 1.0 MB). Each JPEG image must be titled with
the artist’slast name, first name,entry number, and “detail” if
you are including a detail image

         

CLAY ARTS VEGAS, LLC

CLASSES | GALLERY | CERAMIC SUPPLIES

702-375-4147

1511 S Main Street | Las Vegas | NV | 89104

www.clayartsvegas.com

movie day: “Moiré”


“Moiré” from Jack Tompkins on Vimeo.

Client → Sam Brennan [3D Designer]

Turnaround → 4 weeks

Project Summary → Moiré is an enquiry into material and process.

My interest lies in where craft processes lie in contemporary design.
In this project I have subverted one of the oldest crafts in existence,
the coiling of clay, by automating the process using an extruding
machine. Once fired this uniform layered construct of ceramic produces
startling results, the ceramic actually behaves like a spring.

The dip dying process is again another process not usually associated
with ceramics, however I found that the porosity of the work lended
itself to absorbing colour. The piece is of no practical function but
demonstrates how, once put under different conditions, we can still
cause a material to behave completely unexpectedly.

Creative Direction → Sam Brennan
Cinematography → Jack Tompkins

emerging artist: Don Reynolds

Artist’s Statement:
My influences include all of the spectacles of modern times including the circus, the rodeo, county fairs, Mardi Gras / Carnival, rock and roll, casinos, and other assorted roadside attractions which exude a gaudy specialness. My work is an attempt to combine these influences with an archaeological interest in cave paintings, Greek story pots, and ancient stelae to create objects for the modern stone age family.

Here is short bio:
After a series of unfortunate delivery room high-jinks (sic), Mr. Reynolds found himself being raised by a ruthless pack of cruelly discarded professional sports team mascots who sometimes shot him from a canon for their own amusement. As a child, he was forced to dig up un-civil war relics from an ancient battle site to trade with members of the intergalactic jet set that frequently made visits to the abandoned rail yard where he lived. At night, while the elders of his pack were off performing the rare and sacred mascot family dance, he would secretly refine his skills in “the craft that dare not speak it’s name” to pass the solitary hours. As soon as he was old enough to cross the tracks by himself, he discovered an entire underground network of others engaged in the creation of something out of nothing. Mr. Reynolds then joined this troupe of merry pranksters on their non-stop tour of the finest shopping malls around the world. He continues to marvel at the never-ending cleverness of those that make and of those that make do. If you spot him these days, and are confident that you remember the secret handshake, feel free to approach him and ask for the cosmetic secrets of your favorite pop stars. He’ll know! (to be continued…)