emerging artist: Sami Tsang
call for artists: Ceramics Studio Practicum @ Banff Center for the Arts
Overview
Studio Practicum programs provide an opportunity for participants to expand and enhance their technical skills in mediums supported by Banff Centre’s Visual Arts production facilities.
In this program, participants will develop ceramics techniques through practical experience with kiln firing (electric, gas, soda, raku, and wood), and ceramics studio operation.
Participants will receive mentorship and feedback from the Ceramics Facilitator, and assist in the delivery of Visual Arts residency programs and events. Participants will also learn maintenance and safe operation of equipment, and provide assistance to the Ceramics Facilitator in support of artists in residence utilizing the ceramics facilities.
What does the program offer?
Learning opportunities will arise through workshops, demonstrations, and instruction in studio training. Individual learning objectives and goals are determined in consultation with a mentor at the beginning of the program. Ceramics is the principal focus of this program, however supplementary learning opportunities may be offered in other Visual Arts disciplines throughout the program.
Practicum participants will experience hands-on learning in support of artist projects in Visual Arts residency programs. Participants will receive mentorship to strengthen their technical and artistic knowledge, as well as communication, critical thinking, teamwork, leadership and problem-solving skills.
The regular course of study for the Ceramics Studio Practicum is 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Monday to Friday. Participants have the opportunity to spend one weekday focused on independent study, while the other four weekdays are dedicated to supporting the Ceramics Facilitator, artists in residence, and regular departmental projects.
Who should apply?
This program is suited for recent graduates of studio-based programs with an emphasis on ceramics. The program offers experience within a professional organization for those seeking careers as studio technicians or production assistants, or those in pursuit of graduate studies. Applicants must exhibit foundational skills in ceramics through their portfolio submissions.
Artists from diverse backgrounds are encouraged to apply, with a special invitation to individuals of Indigenous descent.
Full details can be found HERE.
call for entries – Juried National V
Red Lodge Clay Center’s biennial Juried National V extends our mission by showcasing current relevant and diverse practices in the field of ceramics. This exhibition provides a spotlight on the breadth of work currently being made that utilizes clay as a featured material. It is our hope that the Juried National will bridge emergent and established makers, and will include some of the best utilitarian, sculptural, traditional and/or experimental work being created today.
Juror: Mike Helke
Mike Helke grew up in Minnesota’s St. Croix Valley, where he still resides and maintains a studio. In addition, Helke is an assistant professor of art/ceramics at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls. He received his MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University, NY.
Application info – Click here to apply!
- ELIGIBILITY Open to all US ceramic artists, 18 years and older.
- All ceramic artwork submissions (pottery, sculpture, and/or small installation work) must be under 18 inches in any direction and less than 50 pounds.
- Artwork must be created with at least 50% clay.
- Work must have been created within the last two years.
- Work must be for sale
Merit Awards
- Juror’s Choice Award: $1000
- Director’s Choice Award: $500
- Gallery Curator’s Choice Award: $300
Calendar
- Submission Deadline: May 1, 2019 (submission portal opens February 1, 2019 via SlideRoom)
- Notification date: no later than June 15, 2019
- Work Arrives to Red Lodge: Friday, Aug. 2, 2019
- Exhibition Dates: September 6-29, 2019
- Exhibition online September 9, 2019, by 10 AM Mountain Time
- Gallery Closing Reception: Friday, September 27, 2019, 5-7 PM (in conjunction with our fall workshop with Mike Helke and Suze Lindsay)
residency opportunity: Pottery Northwest (Seattle)
A residency at Pottery Northwest is an opportunity to grow as a ceramic artist, to engage in our thriving community and to provide a platform to develop your work and support your career. Applicants are chosen for the quality of their work, a perceived potential for growth, and the ability/willingness to actively contribute to the community within the studio. Residencies include studio space for six months to two years, a yearly firing stipend, and exhibition opportunities.
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.















