residency opportunity: Port Moody Arts Centre

Application Deadline: August 30, 2020

Residency Dates: October 1, 2020 – September 5, 2021

Location: Port Moody Arts Centre

PoMoArts invites applications for the 2020/2021 Ceramic Artist in Residence (CAIR). This residency is an excellent opportunity for artistic development within an innovative and supportive ceramic community. The residency requires an emphasis on making, learning and sharing the process of creating with clay. It includes a studio, kiln firings, a solo exhibition and more. In exchange PoMoArts CAIR is asked to supervise two open studio sessions per week. Please see the call for more details.

Please fill in the online submission form here or contact [email protected] for assistance.

Sign up NOW! – Clay Week Open Studio

Join us for an international ceramic outreach project!

In the spirit of celebrating clay we have decided to make Open Studio’s FREE. Click the button below to have you event added to the list.

Clay Week Open Studio (CWOS) is an international event that celebrates clay, community and creativity. Join us on the weekend of October 9- 11, 2020 for a celebration of clay around the world! To keep this year’s open studio safe for all participants we encourage you to move your events to an online format. Virtual demonstrations, lectures, and online sales are just a few ways you can engage your community through Clay Week Open Studios. If you choose to do an online sale we request that you donate 10% of your sales to a charity of your choice.

Register above and enter your event into our database. Make sure to include an image with your registration to help is advertise your event. To keep up with us on social media follow @clayweek on Instagram.

For more info about Clay Week visit the website HERE.

movie day: Launch: The Journal of Australian Ceramics VOL 59 No2, July 2020

This was recorded on 4 August 2020, via Zoom.

Welcome to the launch of The Journal of Australian Ceramics 59/2.

The Australian Ceramics Association acknowledges the Gadigal people of the Eora nation as the traditional custodians of the land on which we operate our Sydney office. We recognise that sovereignty was never ceded and that we are on stolen land. We pay our respects to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders who we might encounter as we connect with our broad Australian ceramics community.

Thank you to everyone who has joined us for today JAC launch.

Today we will get to hear from some of the JAC’s most recent contributors: Ben Richardson (TAS) who has just built a kiln on Bruny Island; Madeleine Thornton-Smith (VIC) who reports on her recent Peruvian residency; the Hermannsburg Potters (NT) visited by Fiona Hiscock in 2019; and Kim Martin (VIC) who covers the dangers of silicosis. Bridie Moran, JAC Editorial Assistant, will also join us, after her journey through The JAC archive.