movie day: Shuffle Trailer
2017/18
Panoramic video for LED screen
available in three-channel projection
colour, sound
8:56 min
Shuffle is a surreal drama of the appropriation, conflation, and international movement of art forms, and their places within colonial histories.
The history of tap dancing lies in North American colonial history. There are many accounts of how West African slaves were brought up from ship holds and forced to dance on deck. Tap, born with this burden of humiliation and grief, was developed further through a melding with Irish step dancing and jigs, English clogging, and later growing through the development of jazz music. Whitewashed and built upon again through ballet in Broadway shows and Hollywood films, it traveled internationally.
The character of the Dancer navigates through this historically layered dance and arrives at a clinically white museum under bright lights. Sculptures made from sallow porcelain, also a material with a complicated history of violence and appropriation, sit on red earth, compacted to hold the shape of museum plinths. The porcelain pieces sit, pale pink burnt as if exposed to a blazing sun, salt encrusted, peeling, grazed, flaking and bruised, wilted and precariously perched on their unstable hosts. The Dancer, wearing black tails encrusted with shells, salt, lace, and pearls, and donning a laced mask over their face, pirouettes through the unfamiliar space.
The film hinges on the tension created between the porcelain pieces, earth plinths, and Dancer; the precarious balance between the percussion of the tap steps and the tenuous structures. The dance begins cautiously, but becomes confident and dangerous in the Dancer’s efforts to engage with the structures – the objects move and shake, and the earth plinths begin to crumble.
When they collapse, ceramics shatter, and together they create a new landscape, seemingly broken, but in fact a new arrangement made from the same material, suggesting a resilience. Through the Dancer’s vain attempts to destabilise and destroy within this museum-like context, they have only co-opted the materials for their own creation.
Mahmudul Raz, cinematographer on Shuffle, won the 2017 Australian Cinematographers Society (ACS) WA Gold Award for best experimental cinematography with this work.
CREDITS (Full credit here)
Written and Directed by
Pilar Mata Dupont
Produced by
Pilar Mata Dupont
Ella Wright
Cast:
The Dancer
Claudia Alessi
Ceramic artist
Andrea Vinkovic
Sculptor earth plinths
Matthew McAlpine
We would like to acknowledge the Badimia people who are the traditional custodians of the land where the red earth used in this artwork is sourced. We would also like to pay our respects to the Elders past, present, and future of the Badimia nation.
The original form of this work was commissioned by Transport for New South Wales and produced by Cultural Capital for Wynscreen, Sydney, Australia.
The reformatting of this work for three-channel projection was supported by the Film/Video Studio at the Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, USA; the Associação Cultural Videobrasil, São Paulo, Brasil; and TENT Rotterdam, Nederland.
Special Thanks
Ella Wright and Bright Yellow Productions; Steve Vojkovic and Boogiemonster; Leanne and Stuart McAlpine; Carly Lynch; Lewis Russell, Jason Liu; Cecilia and Alejandro Mata; Thomas Drenth; Mahmudul Raz and Raz Media; Jennifer Lange; Steve Gardiner and Edith Cowan University.
is MN NICE the program for you???
May 2, 2019 | 6:00pm
Location: Northern Clay Center, 2424 Franklin Ave E, Minneapolis, MN 55406
Learn more: https://www.
Join us for a MN NICE program information session, where we will discuss the program’s many components before opening the floor to questions.
Is MN NICE right for you?
MN NICE supports the development of studio work and provides high-level training in ceramic materials, history and theory, and professional practices. Through instruction and individual mentorship, students build skills, knowledge, and insight necessary to create a personal and cohesive body of work. The program is led by ceramics artist and educator, Ursula Hargens, and is supported by the talents of myriad ceramic artists from around the region and from across the country.
Hargens explains, “Many individuals are eager to further their ceramic education and seek a professional credential, but family, employment, financial and time constraints limit their ability to do so within a traditional academic structure. This certificate program is designed to fill this gap, providing a flexible, yet challenging environment that responds to the needs of non-traditional students, giving them quality information, academic rigor, critical dialogue, and critique as they develop their artistic practice and strengthen their work.”
Find more information here: https://www.
In Common Uncommon with David Mackenzie and Maureen Maurcotte
This spring, David McKenzie and Maureen Marcotte are celebrating their 40th year as studio potters in the Gatineau Hills north of Ottawa. For four decades, they have been partners in life and work and share a home, studios, kilns and materials and family life. They have much in common, especially an approach to clay that centres on creating intensely decorated surfaces on a variety of forms. While this focus is similar, the resulting bodies of work that they each create are entirely unique.
Maureen’s work is characterized by pattern either based on nature or geometric shapes. The designs are often formal and organized, respecting the constraints of the forms she makes. There is a quietness to the overall patterns based on a repetition of the design elements. Even when there is a seemingly random pattern of leaves and foliage, there is always a subtle geometric structure underneath that anchors the pattern.
David is a story teller and his work has a narrative quality based on a vocabulary of images and themes that populate his more casually made coil pots, slabwork and slip cast pieces. Passionate about formulating glazes and constant experimentation, David uses a rich palette of colours and textures. A whimsical sense of design and a lyrical drawing line infuse each unique piece with warmth and intimacy.
Although they share a work environment and most other aspects of their lives, David and Maureen manage to create work that is individual with surprisingly little cross influence. Even though they share glazes, clay bodies and sometimes even decorate the same slipcast forms, there is no mistaking one artist for the other. Perhaps it is the differences between the two styles of work that is remarkable.
monday morning eye candy: George Rodriguez
www.instagram.com/georgesculpts
Read more about his work in this article by Amanda Barr from Ceramics Monthly in 2018
movie day: Talking Earth Pottery
Fin out more about Steve Smith and Talking Earth Pottery here: www.facebook.com/talkingearthpottery
technical tuesday: JONATHAN KEEP – THREE DIMENSIONAL IN MORE WAYS THAN… THREE?
Since the dawn of humanity we have been on a path of inventiveness where nature has inspired us to create. From the earliest times fire, earth and water are the elements used to create the first useful tools – pots.
The shards of pottery discovered by archaeologists through the ages have been the jigsaws that show us how ancient cultures have developed. From crude but useful pots for cooking in or carrying oil to sublime examples of the greatest Chinese porcelain, human creativity knows no bounds.
From the first, we mixed earth and water to make clay and rolled and coiled it to create a wonderful array containers of shapes and sizes. It was possible to build thicker walled and taller vessels. This technique allows greater control as they are built up and to make the vessel look bigger and bulge outward or narrow inward with less danger of collapsing.
Fast-forward to the 21st century and UK based ceramicist Jonathan Keep – who still likes to be called a potter, has created a link with our ancient past by using latest technology to make his incredible work. He uses the very latest technology to explore the relationship between nature and culture. In the same way as our forefathers, Jonathan has made a 3D printer to extrude coils of clay to build his work.. He shows how nature and inventiveness once again combine to create incredibly original, sensual and highly organic examples of the potter’s art.
Read more at: numberiii.com/moving-picture/2016/j-keep-3d-potter















