congrats to ACAD!

ACAD Receives Approval to Offer Its First Graduate Program: Master of Fine Art in Craft Media


After a recent review by Alberta
Quality Council, ACAD has been granted approval to offer a Master of
Fine Arts in Craft Media beginning in January 2015.

This
approval is the culmination of years of hard work and dedication from
many members of the ACAD community. Professor Dianne Taylor-Gearing,
Vice President Research and Academic Affairs and her team worked
diligently with the Province and members of Faculty to ensure that the
application for the MFA met Campus Alberta Quality Council’s rigorous
academic standards.

“All in Academic Affairs who have been
working on this should be commended as this is a major milestone for the
Alberta College of Art + Design as it enters the next phase of its
evolution in providing graduate educational leadership in arts and
craft,” says Dr. Daniel Doz, President and CEO of ACAD.  “I wish to
extend my thanks to the MFA team members for their dedication to:
Mackenzie Kelly-Frere, Charles Lewton-Brain, Tyler Rock, Wayne
Baerwaldt, Laura Vickerson, Jennifer Salahub, Mireille Perron, Greg
Payce, Kurtis Lesick, and Natali Rodrigues with a special thank you to a
number of significant contributors including Marc Scholes, Christopher
Willard, Carissa Cameron Matthews, Alice Joshua and Dianne
Taylor-Gearing”.

A successful country requires highly qualified
creative people engaged to make Canada the best place to live, work and
play. “The MFA in Craft Media establishes ACAD as a unique international
centre of excellence for graduate studies in ceramics, glass, fibre,
metals and jewelry,” explains Professor Taylor-Gearing, Vice President
of Academic Affairs. “We are excited to welcome the first MFA graduate
students commencing January 2015 from Alberta and beyond.”

With
the addition of the MFA in Craft Media, ACAD will be a destination for
many members of Canada’s cultural community wishing to further their
education.   By offering diverse and cross-disciplinary programs at both
the undergraduate and graduate level, ACAD will be recognized as one of
Canada’s leading art and design colleges. 

Approval of the MFA
is one of many foundational steps to realizing the strategic priorities
identified in the 2012 Strategic Plan.  The Alberta College of Art +
Design is unique among its Campus Alberta partners – it is the only
College with a provincial mandate for art and design education and is
now the only College to grant graduate degrees. 

http://acad.ca/wh_news_2014_04_master_fine_art_craft_media.html

ACAD Ceramics hosts 1000 Miles Apart Conference 2013

ACAD Ceramics is pleased to host the annual 1000 Miles Apart Conference, October 3, 4 and 5 , 2013.

Everyone interested is invited and encouraged to attend the conference events free of charge.

The conference will include our featured Guest Artists workshops and
presentations (Bios and images further down in this post!), the
Participant’s Exhibition, lunchtime presentations,  cup exchange, social
events – including a reception for the exhibition in Gallery 371, ACAD
(Friday 5 to 7 pm with refreshments and snacks) and student led
presentations of the participating institutions, highlighting our
 vibrant western Ceramics Programs.  We would like to acknowledge the
ACAD Scholarly Research and Creativity Initiatives through the Rawlinson
Fund for their generous support of this event.

We have a full schedule of events starting at 9 a.m. on Thursday October 3rd.  The following is the basic schedule to date.  We suggest if you are coming from out of town, arriving the night before.

Thursday  Oct 3      

  • 9 am to noon Sean O’Connell demo main studio
  • noon to 1 p.m. lunch
  • 1- 2 p.m. visitor presentation T.B.A.
  • 2 to 3:30 p.m. Sean O’Connell presentation in the Stanford Perrott Lecture Theatre
  • 3:30 to 5 p.m. Ryan McKerley – demo main studio
  • Pub event

Friday Oct 4             

  • 9 am to noon Ryan McKerley demo main studio
  • Noon to 1 pm. lunch       Cup exchange
  • 1- 2 p.m. visitor presentation T.B.A.
  • 2-3:30 pm. Ryan McKerley presentation in the lecture hall
  • 3:30 to 5 p.m. Steve Gorman demo main studio
  • 5 p.m. -7 p.m. Opening of Participant’s exhibition in Gallery 371

Saturday Oct 5         

  • 9 a.m. to noon Steve Gorman demo main studio
  • Noon to 1 pm. lunch
  • 1 to 2 pm. Steve Gorman presentation lecture hall
  • 2 to 4 pm Student presentations on their schools
  • 4 p.m. 371 Show take down begins
  • Pub event

 Sunday Oct. 4

  • 371 Show takedown 10 – noon

The following hotel listings are close to the college and relatively inexpensive:

A brief description of Motel Village including directions and other hotel suggestions:

(http://alberta-travel.suite101.com/article.cfm/motel_village_in_calgary)

Royal Wayne Motor Inn (www.royalwaynemotorinn.com)

Econo Lodge (www.choicehotels.ca)

Comfort Inn (www.choicehotels.ca)

Best Western Crowchild Trail www.bestwesternalberta.com)

Cup Exchange

We are not doing an official chili bowl trade this year, but there will be an informal cup exchange on Friday October 5th.  Catherine Dale is coordinating this, so please email her if you have questions. [email protected]

Also, this year we are providing lunches for all attending.
Therefore, it is important that you please RSVP us if you are attending
and the days you will be joining us.

We look forward to seeing you here!

ACAD Ceramics Students and Greg Payce, Katrina Chaytor, Brad Keys, Sean O’Connell, Robin Lambert

As a student run conference, ACAD Ceramics students have played a big
role in the selection of presenting artists and the conference
itinerary.  We also are pleased to have our Ceramics Visiting
Artist/Instructor 2013/14, Sean O’Connell present at our conference. We
introduce our Guest Artists for 1000 Miles Apart here, in the order of
their appearance:

Sean O’Connell

Sean O’Connell is a studio potter, recently from Helena, MT where he
was the 2012/13 Windgate Fellow at the Archie Bray Foundation.  He has
been involved in the arts since an early experience as a silversmith’s
apprentice at the age of thirteen in Fayetteville, AR.  He attended
college at the Kansas City Art Institute several years later, and upon
completing his BFA in Sculpture, Sean became increasingly interested in
making functional pottery.  This led to many years of independent
research, study and practice.  After several years working as an
instructor in community art centers throughout the Chicago area, Sean
pursued his MFA in Ceramics at the School for American Crafts, Rochester
Institute of Technology in western New York.  Shortly after he was the
2009 Salad Days Artist in Residence at Watershed Center for Ceramic Arts
in Newcastle, ME.  In 2011 Sean was accepted as a long term Artist in 
Resident at the Archie Bray Foundation.  In the course of finishing up
his time at the Bray, Sean is continuing to make quality functional
ceramics, exhibiting nationally, and regularly  gives workshops and
lectures around the country.

Petite Dejeuner, porcelain


Ryan McKerley

Ryan Mckerley started making pots while he was an
art student at Abilene Christian University in West Texas.  In 1995,
after receiving his BFA at  Abiline Christian University, he moved to
Austin and began an apprenticeship with Billy Ray Mangham.  As his
apprenticeship continued, Ryan developed his pottery (and water carving
technique), taught children and adults and began building his own kilns.
Today he divides his time between his ceramic studio technician duties
at the Dougherty Arts Center, organizing the Art of the Pot Studio!
Tour, and teaching/exhibiting around the U.S.

Tumbler (2 views), 2012 Porcelain Thrown, trimmed, water carved, carved, glazed, soda-fired, cone 10

Steve L. Gorman

Steve Gorman attended Central Missouri State University receiving a
BFA in Art Education in 1985 and his MA in 1995.  Gorman held teaching
positions in the Centerview School District for 7 years and theNorth
Kansas City School District for 18 years.  Recently retired from his 25
year teaching career, Gorman is able to pursue his art career full time.
 Gorman’s work is in the collection of the Nerman Museum of
Contemporary Art – Campus Collection; the Oppenheimer Collection; the
Southern Illinois University; the Waterloo Museum of Art; Baker
University; and many private collections.  He has shown his work at
Sherry Leedy Contemporary Arts in Kansas City and Componere Gallery in
St. Louis.  In 2011, Gorman had a solo exhibit at the Nerman Museum of
Contemporary Art.

Lucky, 12 ” x 12″ x 9″

artist profile: Jocelyn Reid

 
 

I just stumbled across the work of Jocelyn Reid on instagram and just had to share it with you all. Jocelyn is a fourth year ceramics major at ACAD.  Her Sandbox exhibition is up until the 15th so if you’re in the area please make the time to stop by and have a play.

Jocelyn writes; “Sandbox is an installation of ceramic sculptures that all feature
removable and interchangeable parts. Because of this, I am inviting all
viewers and spectators to interact, and essentially play with all of the
different works. By engaging this sense of touch and discovery, all
people have the option to transition to a very basic level of play while
in contact with the pieces in the Sandbox. In this way, each person can
become a kind of performer. The forms are inspired by references from
both manufactured and organic forms, and this parallel gives way to
other contradictory ideas – most prominently, adulthood vs. childhood,
and familiarity vs. foreignness. Most importantly, the Sandbox is a
place for exploration of the sculptures, and of each persons own self.”


ARTIST STATEMENT

In the ceramic sculptures I
create, I put organic matter and manufactured objects on equal footing
with one another. By mixing these two contradictory things, the line
between them is blurred. Everyday objects transform into something
foreign and living, just as the natural matter that I reference becomes
hard and substantial. By referencing these two components and mixing
them together, controlled becomes uncontrolled, and vice versa.

The
constant presence of manufactured objects in the natural world inspires
me and informs my sculptures. Nature has become the best and most
special of all fads – an excursion into the wilderness is never without a
sleek camera to document the experience. We keep plants in our houses
and offices, own cabins in the middle of secluded forests, and build
buildings in the image of bee hives and birds nests. The same thing that
inspires wonder and interaction in nature is akin to that which sends
people to line up for hours on end to buy the newest offering from
Apple. That thing is a feeling of seduction, discovery, and play. I
believe this mix of sentiments can be found in everyday life. We rarely
consider the things that we use daily until they’re taken out of our
routine. By melding these ordinary forms with unpredictable organic
ones, I create something familiar yet foreign that inspires a need to
touch and interact.

This tactile interaction with the piece
creates a completely different experience for the viewer, simply because
the work engages a sense other than sight – touch. By allowing the
audience this alternate form of connecting with the work, they can go
past the role of simply being an observer and become a performer.
Although my sculptures can be experienced through sight, they are not
complete and successful until the viewer makes the decision to reach out
and interact with the piece. The recognition of a part on a sculpture
is met with discovering another part that is new and alien – my
intention is that this feeling of exploration can apply to all ages and
types of people. This is how the audience can become performers. By
being seduced by the sculptures, and making the decision to touch them,
every person, no matter who they are, can transition to a very basic
level of play.
All of these intangible ideas find a home for
themselves in my sculptures. Adulthood mixes with childhood, familiar
meets foreign, and the traditional rules about keeping a safe distance
from a work of art become broken. The results are engrossing assemblages
of ceramic parts. Where on one side there is velvety-smooth porcelain,
the piece nesting on top of it has boisterous rubber coating running
down the side. Where one part is sided by creamy balloon-black flocking,
a spiky removable piece is slippery with gold spray paint. Where one
piece tugs on a memory of a familiar shiny bike chain, the idea is
interrupted by another shape that seems to be something vital and spongy
pulled off of the ocean floor.

Marion Nicoll GalleryAlberta College of Art + Design
1407-14th Avenue N.W.
Calgary Alberta
Phone | 403.283.7655
Web | marionnicollgallery.wordpress.com

Adam Field @ ACAD in Calgary

Ceramics Visiting Artist Workshop | ADAM FIELD

February 13 to 16

Adam Field, Covered Jar, incised porcelain with various glazes, soda-fired

The ACAD Ceramics Program is pleased to present a workshop February 13th to 16th with Adam Field from Durango, Colorado. Field will share what he has learned over his 13 year studio career. Lectures and discussions will cover his Korean pottery apprenticeship, technical production methods, aesthetic considerations and the business side of a pottery practice. All are welcome to attend the public lecture and workshop demonstrations. Visiting Artist Talk | Stanford Perrott Lecture Theatre Wednesday, February 15 @ 2 p.m. Born and raised in Colorado, Adam Field earned his BA in Art from Fort Lewis College. For two years he immersed himself in the culturally rich art scene of the San Francisco Bay area, where he began his full time studio practice. From there, Adam relocated to Maui, where he established a thriving studio business. Adam spent most of 2008 in Icheon, South Korea, studying traditional Korean pottery techniques under 6th generation Onggi master Kim Il Mahn. Adam has recently established his studio in Durango, Colorado. His works are included in private collections internationally. Regarding his ceramic studio work, Adam states: I am fascinated with antique artifacts, the way they can speak of mastery of lost peoples, places, and cultures. This inspires me to create works that both radiate history and capture my own place and time. I work toward a clean aesthetic that celebrates the masterful simplicity of antique Far Eastern pottery, while retaining the modest utility of colonial American wares. The surface of my pottery is meticulously carved with intricate designs that borrow from nature and incorporate the human touch. Much of the carving on my work is informed by the pattern languages found in indigenous fiber art, suchas Hawaiian tapa, Incan cordage and Zulu basketry.

Adam Field, Cup, incised porcelain with various glazes, soda-fired.via ACAD