Call for entry: FUSION Pottery and Glass show 2013

Event: FUSION Pottery + Glass Show 2013

Description:
FUSION invites interested glass and clay artists to submit an application.

Ceramic and Glass
artists are invited to participate in our 17th annual juried show and
sale at the beautiful Artscape Wychwood Barns. Showcasing the best of
Ontario’s clay and glass works, FUSION’s Pottery & Glass Show and
Sale will be the premiere show for purchasing the best in clay and
glass. 

NEW
this year, we are pleased to be partnering with Artscape Wychwood Barns
and their Nuit Blanche events. As such the show will remain open all
night long from Saturday, October 5 to Sunday, October 6, 2013. We hope
you can join us.

Deadline Date: July 5, 2013
Details: Download 1 File PDF


a site to see friday: Marcelina Salazar and her Bourry-Box Blog

 

 

Marcelina
not only creates beautiful pottery but she also is documenting her
process in kiln building to share with others interested in building.

From her website:
“Marcelina grew up in Colombia and moved to Canada in 1999 to go to university. In school, she developed a keen interest in food issues. At the same time, her passion for clay was taking shape. Pottery
seemed to bring her interest in food and food issues to the table.

So, after finishing a degree in science at Trent University, she decided to pursue pottery more seriously. In 2007 she completed a Ceramic Certificate at The Haliburton School
of the Arts, and then she studied some more ceramics at Sheridan
College.

Now she works as a full-time studio potter in her timber frame studio, on her farm in rural Ontario.

She also tries to spend free time with her husband, organic farmer Jason Hayes, and her beautiful dog, Kanuk.”

www.marcelinasalazar.com

Bourry-Box Blog @ marcelinasalazar.wordpress.com

“I
have recently finished building a bourry-box kiln in rural Central
Ontario. This is an account of that process, hoping to reciprocate some
of the help and encouragement I’ve received from the ceramics community
all along.”
 
 
 

a site to see friday: Ordinary made Extraordinary

Add the extraordinary to your collection of everyday mugs with a one-of-a-kind BAC Art Mug!

Susan Card

In honour of the BAC’s 35th Anniversary and in support of
its Permanent Collection of Contemporary Canadian Ceramics, the
Permanent Collection Committee selected 35 gifted Canadian ceramists to
create and donate five unique mugs for an on-line auction to raise funds
for the purchase of artwork. These limited-edition and unique
sculptural creations will be sold to the highest bidders from May 20 to
June 3.

It’s an affordable way to start a truly extraordinary collection. In
fact, these mugs are so special that each artist was asked for one
additional mug to include in the Permanent Collection. The remaining
five mugs from each artist will go up for auction online, making them
true collector’s items.

How Does It Work?

These one-of a kind mugs can be seen online starting on May 3. They
will be divided into three auction lots, each lasting five days,
starting on May 20.

All the funds generated from the auction will go to the Permanent Collection Committee for new acquisitions.

Register to Bid Today!

Lot I Closes: May 24 at 6pm

Lot II Closes May 29 at 6pm

Lot III  Closes June 3 at 6pm  Happy 35th BAC!

Come check out the Mugs now.

www.thebac.ca

emerging artist: katriona drijber

 

Growing up in the Rocky Mountains, I have always felt held in by their
walls; through the medium of clay, I play with this sense of containment,
creating spaces for people to enter into within the context of their daily
lives. Working through function, I create spaces from which to draw sustenance
in a literal way; this references the sustenance I draw metaphorically from the
landscape which is so important a part of my identity.
In my practice, I try
to find balance between the piece that gets put in the glass cupboard and never
used and the piece that goes straight from the dish drying rack and onto the
table again. I blend the natural world outside the doors of the home with the
friendships and relationships that grow and develop around the dinner table. I
strive to create work that injects ethereality into everyday life, work that
brings small moments out of the drab or the ordinary. Utilizing the
transformative power of clay, I create microcosms which the viewer or user can
explore – portals of escape into a fantastical refuge from the everyday. 
The thin and
translucent porcelain used in my sculptural and functional work is evocative of
much of what I love about the natural world – for instance, the petals of a
flower or the veils of rain of a passing storm. I fire most of my ceramics in
the soda kiln. This, for me, is also inextricably bound to my concepts of
animation, gesture and the natural world. I enjoy the interplay between rough
surfaces like bare clay or thin layers of flashing slip, and the wet and
luscious surface of a glossy, runny glaze. Through the unpredictable process of
soda firing, fleeting flashes of brightness and color, so illusory and hard to
pin down in the natural world, can be captured upon the surface of a piece for
people to enjoy for years in their everyday lives.

emerging artist: LeeAnn Janissen

My
work explores the sympathetic magic that arises through representing
the natural world in miniature as a way to capture and control vast and
unfathomable forces.  In the series of functional vessels Luna-ware, the
works begin with the creation of models of the moon in porcelain. These
models are then cut and combined with handles, rims and bases to form
domestic vessels. The dark grey, cratered, uneven Luna surface provides a
visual and tactile experience that contrasts strongly with the smooth,
shiny white surfaces of the rims and handles, and invites an examination
of the difference between “natural” and “made”.