movie day: Launch: The Journal of Australian Ceramics

Welcome to the launch of The Journal of Australian Ceramics 59/3.

The Australian Ceramics Association acknowledges the Gadigal people of the Eora nation as the traditional custodians of the land on which TACA office is located. We pay our respects to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders who we might encounter as we connect with you here today and 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: Larissa Warren (QLD), researcher of Mt Tamborine clays and instigator of the Wild Women, Wild Clay Project; Ted Secombe (VIC) master of crystalline glazes; and Angela Garrick, a passionate gatherer of archival footage of potters. Bridie Moran, JAC Editorial Assistant, will also join us, to chat about some of the conversations she had as she prepared this issue.

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movie day: Activism Needs Introverts

For the introverts among us, traditional forms activism like marches, protests and door-to-door canvassing can be intimidating and stressful. Take it from Sarah Corbett, a former professional campaigner and self-proclaimed introvert. She introduces us to “craftivism,” a quieter form of activism that uses handicrafts as a way to get people to slow down and think deeply about the issues they’re facing, all while engaging the public more gently. Who says an embroidered handkerchief can’t change the world?

movie day: Namita Gupta Wiggers Webinar, Betty Feves Ceramics

Educator and curator Namita Gupta Wiggers discusses an important pivot in arts education in the 1930s and 40s exemplified by the ceramics of artist and WSU alumnus Betty Feves. This talk accompanies the exhibition Betty Feves: The Earth Itself at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at WSU. After the talk, Namita has a conversation with Squeak Meisel, Chair of WSU’s Department of Fine Arts. Questions have been moderated via Zoom Q&A.

movie day: Magdalene A.N. Odundo x TEFAF

“Every work by Magdalene A.N. Odundo is a miracle of making: a modestly-scaled pot with the presence of grand architecture; a simple silhouette achieved through a complex technique; a putatively functional vessel that operates at the level of abstract sculpture; a discrete object sitting in space with anchor-like firmness, which nonetheless traverses multiple worlds.

Odundo’s way of bridging opposites has deep biographical roots. She is a cosmopolitan figure, born and raised in Kenya but resident mostly in England since 1971. In that year, she came to study graphic design in Farnham, Surrey, where she encountered Michael Cardew, the great exponent of modern studio ceramics. He encouraged her to travel to his Pottery Training Centre in Nigeria. There she met Cardew’s close associate Ladi Kwali – a traditionally-trained Gwari potter, and an inspirational figure for Odundo. Over the years, she has traveled back to her homeland of Kenya, to San Ildefonso Pueblo in New Mexico, to India, China, and Japan, studying forms and hand-building techniques wherever she goes.

Odundo has forged an idiom equally informed by all these experiences, as well as the formal intelligence of modern sculpture. Her vocabulary is tightly defined, materially speaking – coiled earthenwares, in tones of black, beige and red – but extremely capacious in expressive terms. Her pots have been described (by the Metropolitan Museum of Art) as “simultaneously familiar and novel,” an apt way of describing the way that she alludes to her sources – ancient vessel forms, and the contours of the human body – while also making them wholly her own.

Odundo has been revered in ceramic circles for decades, but only now is she getting the broader recognition she has long deserved. She serves as Chancellor of her old art school in Farnham, has been made Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire, and in 2019, was celebrated in the exhibition Journey of Things at the Hepworth Wakefield and the Sainsbury Centre, which set Odundo’s work alongside carefully selected historic works. (The designer Duro Olowu acutely observed that her pots were “almost like visitors to the show, who had decided to stay put.”) More importantly still, she is continuing to work at the height of her powers. After presenting her work at TEFAF, Salon 94 will stage an exhibition of new vessel forms – the artist’s first exhibition in New York for many years. It will be an opportunity for American audiences to witness first-hand this most magisterial of all ceramic artists, who presides over her medium like a guiding spirit.”