by Carole Epp | Nov 24, 2020 | workshops
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Starts in 2 days!
🤩 The Schedule is NOW ONLINE 🤩
Click here to download the Schedule PDF
You can now go and see when your favourite ceramic artists will be hosting their workshops and Q&A’s 🙂
We will be starting on Friday 27th November at:
Melbourne (Australia, AEDT) – 12:00 AM Midnight Friday
Seoul (South Korea, KST) – 10:00 PM Friday
Vienna (Austria, CET) – 2:00 PM Friday
London (UK, GMT) – 1:00 PM Friday
New York (USA, EST) – 8:00 AM Friday
Texas (USA, CST) – 7:00 AM Friday
LA (USA, PST) – 5:00 AM Friday
Then we will be having:
✔ 1 hour workshop,
✔ and then 1 hour Q&A and networking,
✔ Live Music,
✔ Fun Group Challenges,
✔ Open Round Table Discussions,
✔ and repeat for the next 72 hours back-to-back!
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As well as the awesome speakers listed above, Hyeyoung Cho will be organizing a whole day to focus on Korea and Korean artists.
We will be having a tea ceremony, Korean workshops and live Q&A’s, studio tours, cooking classes, and some fun challenges too! You won’t want to miss this!
by Carole Epp | Feb 6, 2017 | call for entry, emerging artist, job posting, monday morning eye candy, movie day, residency opportunity, technical tuesday
The
Manningham Victorian Ceramic Art Award was established by Manningham
Council in 2009 to support Victorian studio ceramics and acknowledge the
special place that ceramics has in the Manningham region.
The
biennial acquisitive award and accompanying exhibition celebrates the
best in contemporary Victorian ceramic art practice from across the
state. Works acquired through the award form part of the Manningham Art
Collection and are subsequently displayed in public buildings throughout
the municipality, as well as regularly featuring in Manningham Art
Gallery exhibitions.
Manningham Victorian Ceramic Art Award 2017
Major Award $10,000
Merit Award Acquisitions up to $4,000
Entries for the 2017 award will open soon.
The 2017 award will be judged by Janet DeBoos.
You may enter up to three individual artworks. Each artwork entry costs $30.
Entrants
are required to submit up to three high resolution images per artwork
entry (min. recommended – jpg or tiff; 300dpi; 1920 x 1080pixels).
Key Dates:
Entries Open: Soon
Entries Close: Monday 26 June
Finalists Notified and Announced: Friday 14 July
Finalists Exhibition Opening: Wednesday 16 August
Finalists Exhibition Closes: Saturday 23 September
Past Winners and Acquisitions
The
Manningham Art Collection includes almost thirty ceramic artworks
acquired through the Award since 2009, representing some of the best
contemporary ceramic work in Victoria. View a full list of past winners and acquisitions.
www.manningham.vic.gov.au/manningham-victorian-ceramic-art-awards
by Carole Epp | Oct 28, 2015 | Uncategorized
With the August 21st opening of the ‘Beyond Limitations’ exhibition, the journey of this five-week workshop came to a conclusion. The workshop started from a proposal made by Australian artist Vipoo Srivilasa two years ago. The workshop’s successful implementation was then facilitated by Cho Hyeyoung (director of the 2015 Cheongju International Craft Biennale), who has helped to bridge Australia and Korea through both material and moral support over the past year. In Australia, meanwhile, Srivilasa prepared zealously to ensure the program’s success. In my own preparations for this project, I could sense their fiery passion.
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After a year and a half of preparations, the workshop began on July 20th, and we worked without stopping all the way till its final day. Despite the sultry weather, the 21 artists and the support staff were totally immersed in the workshop from morning to evening, not even noticing the time passing. For a ceramicist, five weeks is not long enough to follow a project through to its completion. That is owing to the nature of ceramics, in which each stage requires a lot of handwork and waiting; it is only in the final stage of firing that the work can be completed. For that reason, I was dubious about the amount of artwork those 21 artists could complete over the course of the workshop, and I suggested that the artists each bring one piece with them. My thinking was that the pieces they brought along could be exhibited together with the artwork produced during the workshop, even if those works were
not finished…
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But such concerns evaporated completely. From morning to evening, the artists were fully engaged in their work. As a result, within five weeks, we started to worry about whether the galleries could accommodate display space for all the pieces, which numbered beyond expectations. The initial plan had been to use two galleries, but to exhibit all those works invested with the artists’ passion, we ended up needing all three galleries. Seeing the level of completion and refinement of the works produced during the workshop, notwithstanding its short duration, gave me an indescribable feeling of pride as a curator. With every artist working all the way to the very end to help display the works and complete the exhibition set-up, and with its successful opening, we all felt as if we were one.
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We also had a number of successful projects that had seemed impossible to fit into five weeks’ time. There were two cultural tours, and every evening there was time for artists and staff to gain greater understanding of one another, as they took part in presentations on each other’s artwork and stories and held discussions. Special guest ceramic artists were invited, too, including Kang Hyo Lee, whose dynamic performance we enjoyed, and HunChung Lee, who shared stories of the art world and his life as an artist. Besides these activities, members of the public also were invited to take part. For instance, local residents had hands-on experience in making book holders patterned with Australian aboriginal art, and at a ‘performance’ (artist lunch), museum visitors were served food by Korean and Australian artists. All these projects were a great experience for the artists, the museum, and the
assistants.
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Just as the theme of the workshop suggests, I think the entire process contributed to the artists going beyond their own limitations. By sharing diverse techniques and ideas in contemporary ceramics, while also going beyond national borders, and beyond the boundary lines of ‘mentor’/‘mentee’ and ‘artist’/‘staff’, the workshop was an opportunity for everyone to go beyond their limitations. I truly hope that this workshop offered a chance for forward progress to artists facing a creative block, and for new impetus to artists seeking fresh ideas. I would like to express my gratitude to the exhibition planning team and the museum assistants who enabled the successful completion of the workshop through their support; to the project team that provided five weeks’ worth of delicious meals; and to all the artists who took part in the workshop.
-By Kim Seungtaek, Curator of Clayarch Gimhae Museum
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For more information about the program and the participating artists please visit www.claymentoring.com
The Beyond Limitations project has been funded with supported from Clayarch Gimhae Museum, Australia – Korea Foundation and The Australian Embassy Seoul
by Carole Epp | Oct 21, 2015 | call for entry, emerging artist, job posting, monday morning eye candy, movie day, residency opportunity, technical tuesday
Janet DeBoos: An Interview by Jan Howlin from Australian Ceramics on Vimeo.
Hear Janet DeBoos talk about her experiences in China. Jan Howlin
visited Janet at her home and pottery in the Brindabella Ranges west of
Canberra and in this interview excerpt, accompanied by a slideshow,
Janet describes how she became the designer of factory-produced
ceramics, and how this involvement has radically changed the work she
makes. The interview is accompanied by images of Janet’s home, studio,
office and work taken by photographer Anthony Browell.
by Carole Epp | Aug 20, 2015 | Uncategorized
Thanks to Vipoo for these images from the exhibition.
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Kwon Miok and Kim Seungtaek two curators |
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Thomas Quayle |
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Vipoo Srivilasa |
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Ramesh Mairo Nithiyendran |
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Alison Smiles |
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Heysook Jeun |
Find out more about the mentorship program, the exhibition and the participating artists here:
www.claymentoring.com