Woodfire Tasmania

28 April – 1 May 2011 Deloraine

Woodfire Tasmania 2011 is an event for potters, sculptors, students, educators, collectors, curators, and anyone else with an interest in the ceramic arts. The program will grow from the interests and offerings of makers from around Australia and overseas and be a revelation and celebration of the visions, prophesies and imaginings of a variety of clay and fire practitioners. There will be exhibitions, demonstrations, guest speakers, forums, individual presentations, films, and pre and post program offerings.

All the details can be found here on their website.

Better late than never? Maybe you can still go if you’re nearby…


The Big Smoke 2011 1-3 April
Auckland is the host city for New Zealand’s next National Ceramics conference. The 2011 conference is organised in conjunction with New Zealand Society of Potters, Auckland Studio Potters and Unitec. This event is expected to bring together a diverse range of people involved in the ceramics field both from New Zealand and internationally. The public will have the opportunity to see a vast range of ceramics both from collections and current practitioners. As well as the National New Zealand Society of Potters show many of the Auckland galleries are planning ceramics exhibitions to coincide with the conference. The three day event will provide an academic and social agenda with keynote addresses, guest speakers, workshops, demonstrations, dinner and firings, live entertainment, trade fairs and bus tours. It is intended that this conference and associated events will promote New Zealand ceramics practice to the national and international community. We invite artists, students, educators, writers, curators and suppliers to meet in Auckland in April 2011.

Choosing Craft Lecture tour


American curator, writer and historian, Vicki Halper is visiting Australia in April from 1 – 21 April 2011. Craft Australia is bringing her to Australia because of her expert knowledge of contemporary craft and visual arts practice. This was the basis of her recent book, Choosing Craft: A History Told by Artists, which describes the influences that have shaped American craft through the writings of the artists.
Throughout her tour, Vicki will be giving talks about Choosing Craft, her focus will be on the roles of tradition and innovation within current craft practice. This includes her perspectives on the relationships between craft and design in industry and the historical foundations for this way of working. Vicki proposes to talk about these themes in her lectures. She is also interested in doing critique sessions with the students at the art schools in the universities she will be visiting. The other significant part of the tour is meeting some of the key makers and emerging artists in their studios. Proposed visits

Proposed talks:

More info here.

The New Materiality: Digital Dialogues at the Boundaries of Contemporary Craft


Below is from the Milwaukee Art Museum website.
What is contemporary craft? Craft theory from the late nineteenth century and throughout the twentieth century valued the artisan’s hand over the work of the machine. Thus, historically, the artisan has represented an important social virtue. The New Materiality: Digital Dialogues at the Boundaries of Contemporary Craft presents the work of sixteen emerging and established American craft artists who blend traditional craft materials such as fabric, glass, wood, metal, and clay with digital technologies and, in turn, blur the boundaries between the traditionally established categories of craft, art, and design. Works in the exhibition range from an eleven-foot portrait of Madam CJ Walker made out of combs to glass reliquaries containing videos of extinct objects such as encyclopedias and typewriters. One of the largest pieces, Donald Fortescue and Lawrence LaBianca’s Sounding (2008), explores the relationship between not only craft, art, and design, but also technology and nature. Inspired by Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, the artists lowered a cabriole-legged table into the ocean, together with a hydrophone to record the ambient sound, and kept it there for two months. The work is exhibited with an oversized hornlike funnel, tied together with zip ties, to amplify the recorded sound. ”The New Materiality shows us that the lines between art, design, and craft are becoming more porous as each co-opts various theoretical, technical, and philosophical aspects of the other, asking us to scrutinize the distance between them in contemporary creative practice,“ said Fo Wilson, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee professor and curator of The New Materiality. Also represented in the exhibition are Brian Boldon, Shaun Bullens, Sonya Clark, Lia Cook, E.G. Crichton, Maaike Evers, Wendy Maruyama, Christy Matson, Cat Mazza, Nathalie Miebach, Mike Simonian, Tim Tate, Susan Working, and Mark Zirpel. The New Materiality: Digital Dialogues at the Boundaries of Contemporary Craft is organized by the Fuller Craft Museum and is organized at the Milwaukee Art Museum by the Chipstone Foundation. It is curated by Fo Wilson, assistant professor in the Department of Art and Design at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

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