job posting: Blue Sage Pottery and Art Gallery – Studio Assistant and Sales Associate

Blue Sage Pottery & Art Gallery is currently seeking a full time employee to work as both a Studio Assistant/ Potter and as a Sales Associate.  The studio and gallery is located in Amarillo, Texas on Historic Rt. 66.  Amarillo is a small friendly city with a low cost of living, great school system and easy access to Palo Duro Canyon State Park and other local attractions.

Job Title: Studio Assistant/Potter and Sales Associate

Salary: The salary for this dual position is $30,000 per year, and it is a 40 hour per week position.

About us: Blue Sage Pottery & Art Gallery is a pottery studio and retail art gallery owned by husband and wife, Kent and Megan Harris.  At Blue Sage we design and make high quality handmade stoneware pottery. We make over forty different types of pots on the potter’s wheel for the home, kitchen & garden.  All of our pottery is made by hand, so any experience throwing pots, glazing and loading/firing kilns is a plus! (We are very interested in hiring someone with experience as a production potter that can also “wear other hats” in the business).  In addition to making handmade pottery, we teach several group classes per week. Our studio is both a fully equipped production studio and teaching space.  In the adjacent art gallery, we sell our pots as well as fine art and handmade gifts by other artists.

Job Duties:

Studio Assistant/ Potter:

  • Prepare clay
  • Throw and trim production pots
  • Wax & glaze pottery
  • Keep student work organized
  • Help teach classes
  • Prepare for classes
  • Clean up after classes
  • Make and sieve glazes from raw materials
  • Prepare for firings
  • Load, fire, and unload kilns
  • Keep studio and kiln yard tidy

Sales Associate:

  • Greet and assist customers with their gallery purchases
  • Run register, make receipts, carefully wrap purchases etc.
  • Pack and ship orders
  • Deliver artworks
  • Clean gallery and packing room as needed
  • Operate online sales gallery as needed
  • Assist in photographing artwork & editing photos
  • Assist with marketing efforts

Required Skills:

  • Studio Pottery experience
  • Must be able to lift 30 pounds
  • Must be able to do repetitive movements for long periods of time
  • Must be able to work Saturdays and three evenings per week
  • Ability to work both as an individual and as a team member
  • Ability to pay attention to the details
  • Retail experience

Preferred Skills:

  • Bachelor or Master Degree in Fine Arts or Studio Arts
  • Five or more years wheel throwing experience
  • Basic knowledge of clay and glazes
  • Adobe Photoshop proficiency
  • Proficiency with technology
  • Experience with e-commerce
  • Teaching experience of some kind

How to Apply:
Please apply by e-mailing a letter of introduction, a resume and contact information for three references to Kent Harris at [email protected].  The e-mail application deadline is June 31st, 2018.  We will then choose applicants for skype and/or local interviews that will be conducted in July.  Applicants with studio pottery experience will be asked to demonstrate pottery skills. Thank you for your interest!

job posting: Studio Manager @ Clay Art Center

Clay Art Center seeks a Studio Manager to be responsible for managing the facilities and day to day operations of a vibrant non-profit ceramic art organization in Port Chester, New York.

Individual must have worked at least 1-2 years of experience in a similar ceramic studio environment, have excellent people skills, and experience with supervising others. Must be well organized, possess technical knowledge of kilns and glazes and have enough experience to initiate improvements to the studio as needed, with approval from the Executive Director. ~35 hours per week.

Start date: August 1, 2018

To Apply: If your qualifications meet the above requirements and you are interested in working at the Clay Art Center, please send your resume, two references and a cover letter stating the reasons why you stand out as a candidate for this position to [email protected].

Questions? Contact Leigh Taylor Mickelson, Executive Director at 914-937-2047 x222 or [email protected]

Clay Art Center is a nationally recognized not-for-profit ceramic art organization offering exhibitions, clay classes for adults and children, studio spaces for clay artists and outreach programs in the community. EOE Employer. 914-937-2047. www.clayartcenter.org

 

call for entry: Gyeonggi International Ceramic Biennale 2019

 

The Gyeonggi International Ceramic Biennale (GICB), which celebrates its tenth edition in 2019, is expected to undergo significant changes, especially in regard to its “international competition”.

The upcoming edition of the Biennale will present diverse programs such as the academic symposium and workshop in a comprehensive, multi-tiered format within the framework of the international competition, as opposed to the past in which the biennale hosted programs individually.

The GICB International Competition 2019 – as an exhibition showcasing the present and trends of global ceramics and acting as a gateway for newly emerging artists to acquire a presence in the global art scene – will offer diversified support programs that will help artists expand their worldview.

We’d like to ask for your enthusiastic participation in International Competition 2019!

Major Changes Ahead for Gyeonggi International Ceramic Biennale 2019!
 7Major Changes ahead for International competition 2019
– The artists offered individual exhibition space.
– Round-trip shipping fees for the selected artist covered by GICB
– All selected artist invited to GICB
*If you want to know the other changes, please visit our website: ic.gicb.kr
Eligibility
Artists from all parts of the world are welcome to submit works, both artistic and practical, made from clay (ceramics) or made with the theme of clay (ceramics)
No entry fee!!
Awards
-Total Cash Prize KRW100,000,000 (≒93,222.00USD) for seven (7) main nominees
-The Grand Prize Winner will receive a cash prize of KRW50,000,000(≒46,620.00USD) and will be invited to solo exhibition during the GICB2021.
-Excellence Prize(4)
Ceramics for Use:2 KRW10,000,000(≒9,324.00USD)(includes purchase price)
Ceramics as expression:2 KRW10,000,000(≒9,324.00USD)(includes purchase price)

-Online Exhibition Artist Special Award(2)
Ceramics for Use:1 KRW5,000,000(≒4,662.00USD)(includes purchase price)
Ceramics as expression:1 KRW5,000,000(≒4,662.00USD)(includes purchase price)

How to apply
Period: October 1 (Mon) – 31 (Wed), 2018
Method: Online submissions (ic.gicb.kr)

Exhibition Period
August 2- November10, 2019(tentative)

For Further Information
[email protected]

Measured Composition: an exhibition by Rob Froese; reviewed by Alisha Marie Adams

Robert Froese’s MFA thesis show Measured Composition was on display at the Illingworth Kerr Gallery April 2-21, 2018. The exhibition consisted of elements of pottery production, wood platforms and shelves, paint, and gaffers tape, in order to draw connections between pottery, sculpture, memory and musical composition.

The ideas of rhythm in craft and visual arts are not a new concept, Elsie Fogerty examined these relationships in her book Rhythm. Fogerty identified three constant factors of Rhythm, the factor of time, the element of force, and the element of space (Fogerty 368). We see all of these elements coming together in Froese’s work.

The show consists of four sculptural compositions, which show evidence of time as Froese works to discover connections in his art and life throughout his MFA. When entering the gallery, on the left you encounter the first grouping of work titled Twelve Tone Study (figure 1); these 12 pieces are displayed on two shelves, curved like a wave. Froese created these works at the beginning of his MFA, and they show an exploration in forced erosion of the clay material. This forced erosion creates a false sense of time, which plays into Fogerty’s idea of a temporal space that only exists out of The Element of Force (Fogerty 368). The forced erosion also speaks to the fundamental understandings of clay as a raw material. Clay itself is a product of erosion and geologic weathering of the surface of the earth (Rhodes 3). The earth itself has gone through significant changes over time, and clay is part of the evidence of a significant amount of time passing. The unique permanence of clay once fired is unlike any other material (“Ceramics: A Fragile History”), and ceramists throughout time have been using this to their advantage. Ceramics in and of itself has helped us understand people and civilizations that are thousands of years old (Cooper, 8). Ceramics helps us say that we are here, and Froese work is no different, its evidence of time and the hand.

The show forces you to view the works displayed at a lower level. Froese invites you to slow down and enjoy looking at his work in the same way that one would enjoy a long walk on a beach. The works Extended Composition/Terra Cotta (figure 1) and White Tone Composition are inspired by beach walks along costal Japan and exhibited on painted platforms placed on the floor. The colors of the platforms mimic the colors of bisque clay—terracotta and a grayish white. The display ignites rhythm, while the gaffers tape helps to influence the viewer to associate these compositions with music; Froese associates classical music and improvisational jazz with these two works. The final piece along the opposite wall titled Walking Octave, acts like a mirror to the opposite wall; this side displays work created near the end of his MFA, and acts as a solemn farewell. The work is displayed on a gently waved shelf, with a single pot on the shortest shelf. This pot acts like a lingering note after a pianist has struck the final key.

The ceramic pots making up Extended Composition/Terra Cotta and White Tone Composition show evidence of being made very quickly; they are unfinished in both their creation and their firing. The expeditiously made pots create a conflicting rhythm with the display, as if two different pulses are at play. The hurried labors of making pots has its own production rhythm, from weighing and wedging the clay, to working on the potter’s wheel, to trimming and altering – each of these steps leave evidence of a hastily made pot created by a skilled potter. The composition of the display has its own rhythm and energy, from the impulse to slow and look down, to the conflicting excitable moments where many pots come together, as if they are hurrying towards the end of the plinth the way an orchestra builds to a billowing crescendo. The Factor of Time and The Element of Space, both help us to find rhythm among these dialectical pots (Fogerty 368).

With Froese’s history of time spent in Japan it is easy to draw connections between his work and wabi-sabi ideologies surrounding handmade work. With wabi referring to a way of life, spiritual path, inward subjectivity, spatial events, or a philosophical construct and, sabi referring to material objects, temporal events and aesthetic ideas (Koren 23). The idea that everything is always “devolving toward, or evolving from, nothingness” (Koren 42) is a poetic analogy for how clay and music or rhythm can come together; the idea itself is very wabi-sabi. The main point of contention that one could argue that Froese’s work is not wabi-sabi, is that wabi-sabi is primarily expressed in the private domain, whereas modern works of art are primarily expressed in the public domain (Koren 26). That these works are on display in a public gallery creates an opposing force, with functional forms we associate with the home on display in a public space. These pots are essentially unusable based solely on their display, and un-finished nature. The coming together of opposites is a strong theme throughout the work.

Robert Froese shows a fundamental understanding of music and rhythm and his works directly references Elsie Fogerty’s theory of Rhythm and visual art. The exhibition had a strong balance between production pottery and wabi-sabi ideologies, and the influence Japan has had on Froese is apparent. Froese’s MFA show successfully tied together many aspects of his life and gave us greater insight and understanding to his process and how they relate to memory. It also apparent that Froese values the mark of making, and we see his hand throughout the exhibition.

 

Figure 1 Froese, Robert. Twelve Tone Study (Wall), White Tone Composition (Back). 2018, ceramics, wood shelves, wood platforms, paint, gaffers tape, Illingworth Kerr Gallery, Calgary.

Twelve Tone Study was created at the beginning of Robert Froese’s MFA, these works are more finished the compositions found on the floor. These works explore forced erosion of the clay, and are then fired, glazed, and fired to temperature. They are also displayed on curved shelves, which act to almost mirror the opposing wall. White Tone Composition, is similar to Extended Composition/Terra Cotta, being that both work display bisque clay on wooden platforms, however White Tone Composition is shorter, made of white clay and has a different rhythm.

Figure 2 Froese, Robert. Extended Composition/Terra Cotta (Front), Walking Octave (Wall). 2018, ceramics, wood shelves, wood platforms, paint, gaffers tape, Illingworth Kerr Gallery, Calgary.

Extended Composition/Terra Cotta, is part of Robert Froese’s MFA thesis show Measured Compositions, and is about musical composition, rhythm, and memory. This work is placed at ground level to remind the viewer of long walks on the beach. The gaffer tape is to inform us of the musical connection, as the pots make a visual reference to sound, and music. Walking Octave, located on the wall, is displayed on wave shaped shelf, which aids in the beach walk memory. This work was created at the end of his Masters Degree and acts as a solemn farewell, or like the remaining vibrations of a final cord being struck on a piano.

Bio

  1. 1992

Alisha Marie received her BFA in Ceramics from the Alberta College of Art + Design in 2018, and Level 1 certification in Expressive Arts Therapy in 2013. Working with clay, slip decoration, and ise katagami, Alisha’s practice discusses personal narrative and works to demystify struggles that pertain to mental illness.

 

 

Works Cited

“Ceramics a Fragile History”. British Broadcasting Corporation, April 16, 2012.

Cooper, Emmanuel. 10,000 Years of Pottery. Fourth Edition ed., Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2000.

Fogerty, Elsie. “Rhythm.” The Craft Reader. Editor Glenn Adamson, 2010, pp 366-371.

Koren, Leonard. Wabi-Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers. Point Reyes, California, Imperfect Publishing, 1994, pp. 23-42.

Rhodes, Daniel. Clay and Glazes for the Potter. Revised Edition ed., Radnor, Pennsylvania, Chilton Book Company, 1957.