Ceramic Art of NC University and College Faculty

 
The
public is cordially invited to attend the opening reception of the
upcoming Exhibition: “Ceramic Art of North Carolina University and
College Faculty,” at the North Carolina Pottery Center.   The reception
will be held on Saturday, November 10, 2012, between 12:00 noon and 2:00
p.m., at the Center on 233 East Avenue in Seagrove , NC .   The
Exhibition will continue through January 19, 2013.  An illustrated
catalog documenting the work will accompany the show and will be
available for sale.
 
The
Exhibition showcases the high quality and rich diverseness of clay art
created by faculty who are instructors of ceramics at universities and
colleges throughout North Carolina .  At the same time, it gives
evidence of the experience available to college students in North
Carolina ’s Universities and Colleges and aptly reflects the spirit of
design and the faculty’s commitment to North Carolina ’s ceramic
education.
 
Featured
faculty in the exhibit are; Lynn Duryea, Lisa M. Stinson, and Roy St ra
ssberg of Appalachian State University,  Mark Gordon of Barton College,
Seo Eo and Jim Tisnado of East Carolina University, Michael Sanford of
Elon College, Socorro Hernandez of Fayetteville State University, Janet
Gaddy of Greensboro College, Charles Tefft of Guilford College, Andrea
Wheless of High Point University, Holly Fischer, Warner Hyde, and Lisa
F. Pearce of Meredith College, Yun-Dong Nam of the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, Janet Williams of the University of North
Carolina at Charlotte, Nikki Blair of the University of North Carolina
at Greensboro, Vicky Smith of the University of North Carolina at
Wilmington, Leah Leitson of Warren Wilson College, Joan Byrd and George
Rector of Western Carolina University, and Marilyn Hartness of Wingate
University.
   
Also on Saturday, November 10th, the Center is opening its doors and grounds for the education and benefit of the public with 5th
generation Seagrove potter Chad Brown of the Chriscoe family, firing
the groundhog kiln on the pottery center lawn. The firing of the
groundhog kiln takes approximately 15 hours and uses 2 cords of wood.
The public is welcome to come out to view the firing and see how the
process was done over 200 years ago and still continues today. 

Ying-Yueh Chuang in Protrusion



Nov. 9 – Dec 1, 2012
Address: 401 Richmond Street West, Toronto, Ontario (Just east of Spadina Ave.)
Locations: Red Room (Front Entrance) & Roastery Coffee House on the ground floor. 
Hours: Mon. – Fri. 9:00 am – 6:00 pm, Sat. 10:00 am – 4:00 pm, Sunday: Closed.
Exhibition Description
The
four artists in this exhibition are unified by the idea of protrusion.
In the Red Room, Lynn Kelly’s site-specific felted tree installation
made for the Festival will protrude from the floor and appear to
puncture the ceiling, reappearing in the second floor stairwell. Magda
Wojtyra’s landscape of colourful cones springs out from the wall into a
spiked magical landscape. Robyn Thomas’s magazine hooked Flare spikes
out from the surface. Ying Yueh-Chuang’s solo exhibition in the Roastery
Coffee House features ceramic flowers protruding from her fabric
backgrounds.
Curator 
Canada, Ontario, Toronto: Gareth Bate. 
Artists
Red Room (Front Entrance) & Second Story Stairwell
Canada, Ontario, Toronto: Lynn Kelly, Robyn Thomas, Magda Wojtyra.
Roastery Coffee House
Canada, Ontario, Toronto: Ying-Yueh Chuang.



Sara Flynn @ Erskine, Hall & Coe


 
Sara Flynn exhibition: opening on Wednesday, 14th November.  
 
 
We
will be featuring over fifty of Flynn’s most recent works in thrown
porcelain. This show highlights the diversity of Flynn’s work,
represented by vessels and tea bowls of varying simplicity and depth.
 
 
The show will be open from the 14th of November through the 6th of
December 2012. 
 
 *All works are by Sara Flynn (b. 1971) and are made of porcelain in 2012.
 

Monday – Friday 10am – 6pm
Saturday 10am – 6pm (during exhibitions)

15 Royal Arcade 

28 Old Bond Street 
London W1S 4SP
 tel +44 (0)20 7491 1706 

Dinnerware: A Study in Design

Winston Churchill spoke of architecture – ‘We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us’. The sophisticated interdependence of design elements required to create an aesthetically pleasing set of functional pieces are often completely ignored by the user because of the commonplace nature of the object. This exhibition looks at how function and aesthetics drive some of the most everyday objects that surround us. Works included in this exhibition are by Harlan House, Shane Norrie, Judi, Dyelle, Goyer-Bonneau, Peter Jensen and others.

Nov 3rd – Jan 20th, 2013

Location:
Permanent Collection Corridor

Curator:
Jonathan Smith

Reception:
November 25, 2012 2 – 4pm

Burlington Art Centre
1333 Lakeshore Road 
Burlington, Ontario, L7S 1A9 
Phone (905) 632-7796
Fax (905) 632-0278