Upcoming events at the Gardiner Museum in Toronto

  • Copy @ Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Arts
    Location Gardiner Museum Lobby

  • Dates Jan 9th – Feb 5th, 2010
  • AdmissionFree
  • Ceramic artists have borrowed forms and designs from each other and from other media for thousands of years. This mini-exhibition reveals how Canadian ceramic art has been enriched by the appropriation of formal and design elements from sources as diverse as Ukrainian textiles and First Nations ceremonial art.

FILM – Color and Fire: Defining Moments in Studio Ceramics, 1950-2000
Friday January 15, 2010 from 6pm
Free with admission
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2000, in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name. 50 minutes Color and Fire explores the evolution of 20th century ceramics in interviews with many of the leading figures in the field, including Ruth Duckworth, John Mason, Ron Nagle, Otto Natzler, Richard Shaw, and Betty Woodman. Featuring discussions about Abstract Expressionism, Funk, sculpture, vessels, and the role of ceramics in world art, these interviews provide fascinating glimpses in to the studios, lives, and work of an inspirational group of artists.

Lectures
Engaging talks by artists, authors, critics, professors and more.
Cynthia Hathaway: Dutch Ceramics and Design

Sunday January 24 at 4 pm
Goldring Lecture Hall
Free
Cynthia Hathaway, a designer with the Dutch collective Droog Design who often uses the strategies of copying and sampling in her work, will discuss how design practice has resurrected ceramics in the Netherlands. Yael Novak: Lecture
Wednesday February 3 at 4 pm
$10 public, $8.50 members, seniors, students (includes admission)
Register
Artist Yael Novak of the Ceramic Artists Association of Israel (CAAI) talks about the artists and themes of the exhibition From the Melting Pot into the Fire: Contemporary Ceramics in Israel. Yael Novak: Tour
Sunday February 7 at 11 am
$10 public, $8.50 members, seniors, students (includes admission)
Register
Join Yael Novak as she leads a tour of the special exhibition From the Melting Pot into the Fire: Contemporary Ceramics in Israel which also includes her work. Susan Collett
Friday April 9 at 6:30 pm
$10 public, $8.50 members, seniors, students (includes admission)
Register
Known for her clay sculptures and extraordinarily rich surfaced pieces, Toronto artist Susan Collett speaks about her work and her master workshop experience in Israel. She will also explore the architecture of Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Petra, Jordan and the stratified desert landscape of the Dead Sea.See their website for more info.
Gardiner Museum
111 Queen’s Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 2C7
Tel +1 416.586.8080
Fax +1 416.586.8085
[email protected]

Art of Craft: Canada.BC.Korea Exhibition

Exhibition Runs January 14th – April 11, 2010.Curators Talk January 14th 7pm at the Museum of Vancouver. From the Craft Council of BC website:”Minds and hands work together to bring beauty to everyday objects. The Art of Craft explores the use of traditional craft techniques to explore complex contemporary issues of identity and culture, meaning and metaphor. But the pieces still call to mind the ancient, bodily pleasures of craft making – plunging hands into clay, burnishing metal until smooth, exhaling breath into hot glass – process as art. The Art of Craft is an exploration of the breathe and depth of Canadian contemporary craft – exploring the supposition that there is “no such thing as a particularly “Canadian” type of craft, there is no such thing as a single, unifying field of “Craft.” Nostalgic ideas about comfort and safety do not exist in the lived reality of Canadian craft. But this is not a negative. Rather, this is a powerful reminder of the fluidity and openness of craft materials and techniques.”(Alfoldy). Canadian craft and process is given an international context by the parallel exploration of the use of ancient Korean craft techniques in contemporary Korean art. Canada is this year’s official guest country at the Cheongju International Craft Biennale. Over one thousand artists from more than forty countries participate in the Biennale. The Canada Pavilion is a large scale exhibition of our country’s finest hand-made work enabling a deepening of the relationship between the two countries – allowing the Art of Craft to further explore the somewhat stark, sometimes unformed contrasts between two countries and how their two different cultures have impacted the development of contemporary fine craft. The first exhibition room houses Unity and Diversity art works demonstrating that Canada is home to a dynamic, inspired craft community, one that is defined through its rich layers of difference. As a result of these distinctions a unified voice begins to emerge, one that is fiercely proud of the high level of sophistication achieved by its crafts, and eager to pursue new directions for the field. Canadian craftspeople are globally recognized for their unique contributions to craft. The second aspect of Art of Craft explores the artistic process. By Hand: BC.Yukon reminds us that sophisticated pieces of fine craft are born in the hands and studios. A short video focusing on artisan’s hands during the process of creating craft objects will provide the contextual backdrop for By Hand. Highlighting the studio, materials, tools, process (from concept sketches and inspiration through to finished piece) – allows the viewer to engage in the various stages represented through various vignettes. The third exhibition consists of 47 works selected from the 2009 Cheongju International Craft Biennale Exhibition, Korean Craft Museum, Cheongju, South Korea Korea stands at the epicentre of international craft production with its long-standing traditions and sophisticated contemporary craft artists. Since 1999, the Republic of Korea has supported craft by staging the International Craft Biennale, which brings together craft artists and their patrons from around the world.”Check it out in person if you can, or find more details here.
CRAFT COUNCIL OF BRITISH COLUMBIA 1386 Cartwright Street, Granville Island,
Vancouver, BC, Canada V6H 3R8
tel: (604) 687-6511
toll-free: 1-888-687-6511
fax: (604) 687-6711
email: [email protected]

The New York Ceramics Fair

“Today’s jewel in the crown of New York’s Winter Antiques Week, The New York Ceramics Fair, brings together a carefully selected and distinguished international group of around 36 galleries offering all things “fired” – porcelain, pottery, glass, cloisonné and enamels, in a setting perfect for the exhibition and sale of important small objects. “

SHOW DATES
JANUARY 20th – 24th, 2010

Also Check out their Lecture Series:
Sponsored by the Chipstone Foundation

WEDNESDAY JANUARY 20th
12 Noon “Sources for Services” by Angela Howard 
2pm “Success to America: English Creamware for the Patriotic American Market” by Patricia Halfpenny 
4pm “Small cups with one handle fit for coffee or chocolate” : Chinese Export Porcelain Coffee Wares by Ronald W. Fuchs II

THURSDAY JANUARY 21st
12 Noon “Dutch Jugs and Flint Wares: Salt-glazed Stoneware in Early America”
by Janine E. Skerry 
2pm “Teapots, Coffeepots, and Cream Jugs, Oh My: Surprises in American Stoneware”
by Suzanne Findlen Hood

FRIDAY JANUARY 22nd
4pm “Wedgewood: 250 Years of Innovation and Derivation”
by Dr. Jeffrey Tulman

Both Saturday Lectures are in support of the Ceramic Fair’s 2010 Loan Exhibit

SATURDAY JANUARY 23rd
12 Noon “Making a Moravian Squirrel Bottle, Lecture-Live Demonstration.” by Michelle Erickson 
2pm Pottery “For Which the People Were Eager: The North Carolina Earthenware Tradition.”
by Johanna M. Brown

LECTURE TICKETS:
$10 per person per lecture plus $20
show admission (run of show)
3 lectures $25 plus show admission.
Seating is limited. Reservations required –
please call 310.455.2886

Show Information:
Caskey Lees, Inc.
PO Box 1409
Topanga, CA 90290
310.455.2886
310.455.1951 fax
website