The de Young Open 2023

The de Young Open 2023

de Young Museum

Golden Gate Park
50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Drive
San Francisco, CA 94118

September 30, 2023 – January 7, 2024

Mari Emori’s work was chosen for The de Young Open 2023!

The de Young Open 2023, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco’s second triennial juried community art exhibition, features work by artists from the nine Bay Area counties: Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Solano, and Sonoma. Artworks are hung salon-style and installed nearly edge to edge and floor to ceiling in the de Young Museum’s Herbst Exhibition Galleries, maximizing the number of works on view. Designed to celebrate and support our local arts communities, The de Young Open 2023 invites you to see the creativity of the Bay Area under one roof—you might even find an artwork to make your own!

Plan Your Visit

By |2023-09-07T08:51:15-07:00September 7th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on The de Young Open 2023

Newsletter August 2023

ACGA Newsletter August 2023

CALIFORNIA CLAY & GLASS ARTISTS CELEBRATE SUCCESS!

ACGA 30th Annual Clay and Glass Festival

I extend my heartfelt gratitude for the incredible success of the 30th ACGA Clay and Glass Festival, held on July 15th and 16th. Your presence and unwavering support have helped to build our Festival into a Palo Alto tradition.

A special acknowledgment goes to our talented artists, 110 in total, including 18 new talents, whose limitless creativity illuminated the Festival and ignited inspiration in us all. To our treasured visitors and patrons, your purchases serve as a direct endorsement of our artists’ journey and our shared community; your support is cherished.

Each artist’s creation is a manifestation of their heart and soul, a unique piece that takes on its own life. Observing the connections formed between customers and these works is the pinnacle of my experience as an artist at the ACGA Clay & Glass Festival.

This is a moment to extend gratitude to our esteemed partners: the city of Palo Alto and the Palo Alto Art Center. Your steady support spanning three decades has been the foundation on which this Festival thrives. Let’s also acknowledge the invaluable contributions of the Festival Committee, the Marketing Team, and our Producer, Messenger Events. Your tireless efforts behind the scenes have played a pivotal role in ensuring the Festival’s continuing success.

As we reflect on this year’s Festival, we recognize that every event offers insights for growth. We have much to learn from this experience and are steadfast in our commitment to continuing to work on improvements. The thought of coming together again, surrounded by art and our wonderful community really gets us excited. Until that moment comes around, please take care and continue to nurture your creative endeavors!

With genuine gratitude,

Mari Emori, ACGA Board President, and Board of Directors

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE PEOPLE”S CHOICE WINNERS!

Kevin Scheer and Mari Emori - Clay & Glass Festival 2023Congratulations are due to the winners of the inaugural “People’s Choice Award”: Ren Lee – (Clay – Tied)

Kevin Scheer (Clay/New Artist- Tied)
Daniel Wooddell (Glass/New Artist).

This unique program has enriched our Festival experience, and we thank everyone who voted and celebrated their exceptional talents.

Pictured: Kevin Scheer and Mari Emori
Submitted by Mari Emori

MEMBER NEWS

MEET YOUR BOARD MEMBER: SUSIE RUBENSTEIN

Susie Rubenstein, ACGA Board Member
Susie Rubenstein, ACGA Board Member

I took my first ceramics class at Cabrillo College in 1975 and was immediately hooked. By the fall of that year I was at UC Santa Cruz in a major called “Arts and Crafts and their History”. It was open only to Juniors and Seniors with all their other prerequisites filled, the course of study being three quarters of ceramics for 2 years, a quarter each of drawing, painting, and printmaking, and the same for art history also for two years. Most of us spent all our time in the ceramics studio learning from Al Johnsen of Scott Creek Pottery whose teacher was Marguerite Wildenhain. The focus of our program was functional pottery and I have not strayed far from that in my own ceramic work.

By 1978 I was a member of the Santa Cruz Art Center and an apprentice to Al Johnsen in his Davenport studio. It was a pivotal time for me, learning about being a potter as a way of life, and I loved it, but a relationship had a stronger pull and for a time I was in northern California homesteading and ceramics was on the back burner. Discovering that as much as I was drawn to a rural way of life, it was a 24 hour job that wasn’t going to allow for ceramics for a long time, so by 1982 I was in southern California working in the Laguna Beach School of Art’s studio (currently Laguna College of Art and Design) and teaching part time at Irvine Valley College. In 1983 I returned to school to further my study at the Kansas City Art Institute, but after one semester in ceramics I transferred to the Fiber Department, and from there did my graduate work at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan. It was not long after graduating that I returned to clay. Those years were tumultuous but important in that I found a source for integrating form and surface. I continue to look at textiles, translate some of the surface treatments to a ceramics process and am constantly grateful to have friends and colleagues in both disciplines.

As the need to generate income became a priority, I held many teaching jobs including at the Orange County High School of the Arts, Arts in Corrections (teaching inmates at several CA state prisons), Soka University, Saddleback College, and finally landing a full time position at Mt. San Antonio College where I was the lead faculty for the ceramics program. I retired in 2020 and now can work full time in my studio in San Juan Capistrano.

I’ve been a member of the ACGA for about five years and on the board for two. Although the pandemic was disastrous in so many ways, it did allow the ACGA to hold board meetings online, which has increased the representation of members throughout the state. I hope that my presence on the board and serving on the communications committee will help promote even more diverse representation, both geographically and in general membership. It’s been a great experience being part of this organization and I look forward to expanding our reach.

EXHIBITS

Terracotta Corridor

“Clay pipe was invented for specific uses; it never would have been invented for art.
It took a few ceramics geniuses to imagine new possibilities.”

— Tom Franco, Mission Clay artist-in-residence

Have you been introduced to the captivating world of the Terracotta Corridor? This expansive outdoor exhibition is now on display in Napa’s Rail Arts District and boasts 21 impressive clay pipe sculptures. Presented by Mission Clay Products and Rail Arts District Napa (RAD), it’s a fusion of artistry and industry that’s truly a sight to behold. Curated with care by Shelly Willis and John Toki, the exhibition features selections from 11 exceptional artists, including Alan Chin, Cameron Crawford, Ann Christenson, Carolyn Ford, Tom Franco, Robert Harrison, Susannah Israel, Lisa Reinertson, Patrick Siler, John Toki, and Rimas Visgirda. These artists brought their creations to life during residencies at the esteemed Mission Clay Art & Industry Program. Remarkably, a total of 21 sculptures made their journey to Napa, California.

I had the privilege of attending an enthralling presentation on the Terracotta Corridor by John Toki and Bryan Vansell, the visionary Founder and Director of the Mission Clay Art & Industry Program. This event unfolded during the California Conference for the Advancement of Ceramic Art (CCACA) in Davis a few months back. Some participating artists shared their experiences during the presentation. Hearing their stories, challenges, and inventive solutions was fascinating. Can you imagine some artists had to complete the process of carving and glazing the 6 to 8 feet clay pipe extrusions within days due to the fast drying speed at the location of the residency program in Phoenix, Arizona? Following the enlightening presentation was a book signing for the recently unveiled exhibition catalog (the cover image above). This beautifully illustrated 80-page catalog delves into the history of the Art & Industry Program, the sculptures themselves, and the brilliant ceramic artists behind them, adding depth and dimension to the viewer’s journey.

What makes this exhibition unique is its ingenious concept and dynamic viewing experience. The exhibit harmoniously blends creativity and industry with the Mission Clay Products facility, renowned for its sewer pipe production, which also serves as the very origin of these extraordinary sculptures. This fusion transforms ordinary sewer pipes intended to be underground and unseen into impressive standing masterpieces. As John aptly noted, “Unique to the viewing experience is that artworks in most cases viewed in ‘in motion’—people traveling on the Napa Wine Train at 20 miles per hour, people on bicycles and scooters, and those running or walking or even driving around the city of Napa near the Vine Trail.”

Why not treat yourself to a day of artistic exploration? Experience the enchantment of the Terracotta Corridor in Napa and witness the transformative power of clay, passion, and imagination. I’m excitedly planning my visit. The exhibition is accessible along the Napa Vine Trail, Oxbow Public Marketplace, and near the Culinary Institute of America (Copia) until December 2023. You can see the location of the sculptures on this map.

If you want to know more about this amazing project, an exquisite exhibition catalog titled “Terracotta Corridor” is available now at the Napa Wine Train Gift Shop at 1275 McKinstry Street in Napa. If you are interested but can’t make it to Napa, the link to purchase the catalog will soon be added to the RAD website. Owning this catalog is like holding a piece of the exhibition’s magic.

And, make sure to check out these captivating short videos: Installation of Terracotta Corridor – Rail Arts District, Napa, CA. 2022; Mission Clay Art & Industry – Making Pipe Sculpture 2022.

LH Horton Jr Gallery presents VISIONS IN CLAY

August 28 – September 21, 2023
Gallery Reception August 31 • 5:00 – 7:00p.m.
Zoom Reception: September 9 • 11:30a.m.–12:30p.m.
Free & Open to the Public

STOCKTON, CA – Located on the campus of San Joaquin Delta College, LH Horton Jr Gallery presents the 14th Annual Visions In Clay Exhibition, August 28 – September 21, 2023. The Gallery Reception is planned for Thursday, August 31st, from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. Admission to the Gallery exhibition and reception is free and open to the public. In addition, the Gallery will host a Zoom Reception with artists from around the country, on Saturday, September 9, from 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Visit the Gallery’s website for the Zoom link access. Joan Takayama-Ogawa, Professor of Ceramics and Product Design at Otis College of Art & Design in Los Angeles, was this year’s guest juror who selected the artwork and awards for the exhibition. The awards were given for a body of work in three award categories (Best of Show $800, 2nd Place $600, 3rd Place $400) sponsored by the Horton Gallery Foundation, and the San Joaquin Potters Guild presents a $300 Founders Award each year. There is a fifth award for $800 funded by San Joaquin Delta College for a Regional Artist-in-Residence selected by Ceramics Professor Shenny Cruces. The Regional Artist will present a ceramic art demonstration and artist talk to the ceramics and sculpture students. The awards will be announced at the Opening Reception on Thursday, August 31st.This year’s exhibit features 57 works by 47 artists from around the country, including 5 Delta College Alumni students, Abraham Alvarez, Bonny Barker, Samantha Holcomb, Zoe Nelson, and Melodie Sidhu. We are all so very proud of our Delta art students – Go Mustangs!

“Creative people know that what is ‘work’ is nothing of the sort. To understand what an artist does is to consider the whole of their existence. The dedication borders on obsession.”

— Joan Takayama-Ogawa

Visions In Clay was founded by the San Joaquin Potters Guild in 2002 through 2007, and turned over to the Horton Gallery in 2010 to continue presenting the ceramics based exhibition. Visions In Clay is the largest exhibition of ceramic works in the San Joaquin Valley. Elaine Quave Crossroads CactiVisions In Clay 2023.

ACGA members whose work (pictured above) was selected for the exhibit include Linda Fitz Gibbon, Vicki Gunter, and Ren Lee.

Press Release by Jan Marlese, LG Horton Jr Gallery, San Joaquin Delta College

60TH KINGS MOUNTAIN ART FAIR - LABOR DAY WEEKEND
60TH KINGS MOUNTAIN ART FAIR - LABOR DAY WEEKEND

60TH KINGS MOUNTAIN ART FAIR
LABOR DAY WEEKEND

This is the KMAF‘s 60th year! Several ACGA artists will be participating. Ceramics: Barbara Glynn Prodaniuk, Peggy Loudon, Fred Stodder, Lyn Swan, Justine Tatarsky. Glass: Cristy Aloysi & Scott Graham, April Zilber.

Breakfast is available 8:00-10:30 am and lunch from 11:30-4:30pm. Art Fair open 10am – 5pm every day. Shuttles run from the parking lots to the event.

More Information:

Kings Mountain Art Fair

Submitted by April Zilber

Kings Mountain Art Fair - Labor Day Weekend

This popular event benefits the Kings Mountain Volunteer Fire Brigade and Kings Mountain Elementary School.

LINDA FITZ GIBBON AT CLAY ART CENTER FIRST ANNUAL FUNCTIONAL FALL EXHIBITION: A SEAT AT THE TABLE.

This National Call For Entry Exhibition brings everyone to the table through ceramics that serve, featuring work from artists at all stages of their careers throughout the US.

Functional Fall: A Seat at the Table, Juror: Jessica Putnam Phillips

Clay Art Center, Portchester, NY, Sept. 1 – Oct. 16.

More Information: Clay Art Center

Submitted by Linda Fitz Gibbon

Linda Fitz Gibbon

NICHIBEI POTTERS ONE OF A KIND KILN OPENING & CELEBRATION

For potters, there are few things as exciting as opening a kiln load of  freshly fired pots.

Being able to share that process with our customers is even better. For the last 25 years, we have hosted an event at our studio where we do just that.

But this is not just any kiln load full of pots it’s a load full of all one-of-a-kind pieces. This year‘s event will be on Saturday, August 19 from 1 to 5 at the Nichibei studio In Sebastopol. Seating is limited and reservations are required but if you’re interested in attending please email Cheryl or Mikio at potters@nichibeipotters.com

Nichibei Potters
Susie Rubenstein
Liz Lauter - Majolica

SUSIE RUBENSTEIN AT MILL VALLEY ARTS FESTIVAL

Immerse yourself in the lively atmosphere as you explore the various booths and exhibits, interact with the artists, and discover unique treasures to take home. Whether you’re an art enthusiast, a music lover, or looking for a fun weekend activity with the family, the Mill Valley Fall Arts Festival is not to be missed. Mark your calendars and join us in Old Mill Park on September 23rd and 24th from 10-5:00. More information is available at Mill Valley Arts Festival.

Submitted by Susie Rubenstein

Out of the Fire - Pajaro Valley Arts Sudden Street Gallery

“Out of the Fire” at Pajaro Valley

Arts Sudden Street Gallery in Watsonville showcases artwork created or affected by fire, such as a kiln, welding, blown glass, and other methods. ACGA members Christi Aloysi and Scott Graham, Tamara Danoyan, Laurie Hennig, Chris Johnson, Cynthia Siegel, Randie Silverstein, and Bev Zerbib-Berda are among the 55 participating artists.

This multi-media exhibit explores artwork that utilizes fire as a transformative tool in the making of the work. The use and control of fire has been critical to the survival and advancement of humankind. For thousands of years, fire has been used for warmth, light, defense, ceremony, and communication. Fire has been used to transform elements into tools and processes that affect all areas of our lives. We are still in awe of both its productive and destructive qualities. We invite you to enjoy the transformative processes in this exhibit.

“Out of Fire” Exhibit opens August 9 at Pajaro Valley Arts Gallery. Opening Reception is Sunday, August 13 from 2-4pm at

37 Sudden St. Watsonville.

Bev Zerbib-Berda

Bev Zerbib-Berda - Celadon Bowl

Tamara Danoyan - Out of the Fire

Tamara Danoyan - Eco Printed Vessel

Tamara Danoyan - Out of the Fire

Randie Silverstein - Blessing Bowl

Sac Open Studio Exhibition

Verge Center for the Arts
Sacramento, California
Kick Off Party, Sept. 7, 6-9 pm
Exhibition Dates: Sept. 7 – 17

Linda Fitz Gibbon‘s Woodland studio will be open Sept. 9 & 10, 10 am – 5 pm.


CLICK TO VIEW THE SAC OPEN STUDIOS GUIDE

VINCE MONTAGUE
“INTRUSIVE THOUGHTS” AT  h u g o m e n t o

 

Hugomento is excited to present “Intrusive Thoughts,” a solo exhibition of ceramic sculptures by California artist Vince Montague, on view now through September 2.

Making art and writing poetry is an intrusive-thinking area in Montague’s studio practice, a place of risk and freedom, an opportunity for him to welcome ideas and images into his atelier, to make sense of them if he can. Montague creates sculptures and writes poems out of his own obsessions, his own worries, his own doubts, traumas and encroaching preoccupations.

h u g o m e n t o
795 22nd Street,
San Francisco, CA 94107
info@hugomento.com

Submitted by Vince Montague via Instagram

VINCE MONTAGUE “INTRUSIVE THOUGHTS” AT h u g o m e n t o

ANN WAGENHALS in    “1000 VASES” IN PARIS

 

ANN WAGENHALS in “1000 VASES” IN PARIS

Ann Wagenhals has had two vases accepted to the “1000 Vases” (actually ~90 vases!) Paris exhibit during Paris Design Week. Her pieces–one pit-fired vase and one horsehair raku vase–titled together “Serenity, Motion & Joy” will be shown at Galerie Joseph in the Marais September 7-10. Ann is on Instagram @annwagenhals and her website is Annwagenhals.com.

1000 Vases is on Instagram.

Submitted by Ann Wagenhals

KANAYAMA WOODFIRING WORKSHOP

KANAYAMA WOODFIRING WORKSHOP

September 17th to October 8, 2023

 

Lee Middleman will host a woodfiring event in Aomori, Japan, September 17 to October 8, 2023, accompanied by 2 American and Canadian potters: ACGA members Miki Shim-Rutter and Chelsea Fried and Alan Lacovesty.  Lee has participated and organized over 10 such events since 2004.

Between 2002 and 2012, over 130 ceramic artists and potters from around the world participated in similar woodfire programs at Kanayama. The program focused on the exchange of techniques and ideas about ceramic art and wood fire. By working together and freely sharing information, the sponsors encouraged mutual understanding and cooperation among potters throughout the world.  Lee hopes this mini-program revives the tradition.

They will also explore the Jōmon ceramic history and Aomori culture.  The Jōmon pottery (縄文土器, Jōmon doki) is a type of ancient earthenware pottery which was made during Jomon period (c. 14,000 and 300 BC) in Japan. The term “Jōmon” (縄文) means “rope-patterned” in Japanese, describing the patterns that are pressed into the clay.  Fragments have been dated as early as 14,500 BCE.

This is Lee’s first return trip to Japan since Covid interrupted his strong interest in exploring Japanese ceramics and culture.  He will post activities and results on social media.

Submitted by Lee Middleman

HOW TO POST YOUR NEWS AND EVENTS TO THE ACGA WEBSITE AND SUBMIT ITEMS FOR THE NEWSLETTER

Our communications tools now allow members to post their news items directly to the ACGA News Blog, for daily publication. Posts must be admin-approved and may take up to 48 hours to appear in the blog. Incomplete submissions may take longer. The web-based news blog is a living document and posts items in the order they are published. You can scroll through the entire history of the ACGA News here: https://acga.net/acga-news/.

In addition, our monthly ACGA newsletter is emailed to approximately 5500 subscribers. This news is less time-sensitive than more immediate forms of communication such as the news blog and our social media accounts on Instagram and Facebook.

Social media is the most effective and most instantaneous way to reach your audience, provide a platform that can be posted to repeatedly and often. We encourage members to cultivate their own social media accounts on facebook and instagram, to build your own audience and market your wares. We are happy to amplify your message to our followers from time to time when the following conditions are met:

  • Captions must include who, what, where, when details.
  • Posts must relate to something a collector or student can engage with such as a gallery event, an open studio, or an upcoming sale. Posts that lack context will not be reposted.
  • We will not repost items projecting more than 2 weeks in the future.
  • Posts should be tagged @theacga to ensure we can find them

ACGA social media accounts have more than 17,000 followers, so following these guidelines could be valuable to you. News items must be written in grammatically correct form, include all details including names (first and last) of members involved, links to artist websites or social media, studio or gallery locations and hours of operation.

Be aware that we have over 350 members and will strive to be fair and equitable, and to showcase the wide variety of accomplished artists who comprise our group. Publication is not guaranteed, and is not a perquisite of membership. If you have an event with frequent updates or an extended window of time, we expect you to manage your news on your end and we may or may not repost at our discretion.

CLICK HERE FOR SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

ACGA GENERAL MEETING MINUTES – NO JULY MEETING

Date of Next Meeting: Monday, August 14, 2023, 5:30pm

READ JUNE MEETING MINUTES
All ACGA members in good standing are invited to attend our monthly board meeting on zoom. To receive a zoom invitation for the next meeting, email your request to Mari Emori, emori.mari@gmail.com.

LISTINGS

SEE EVENTS CALENDAR:
https://acga.net/events-calendar/
This space is envisioned for future listings of upcoming calendar events. Since we have only just launched the submission process in this mailing, we do not have any current events at this time. Please follow the submission process outlined herein.

Professional Kiln Repair Service
NorCal Kiln Repair- “Professional Bay Area repair service since 2006”
· evaluation & repair: ceramic & glass kilns (gas & electric)
· tutorials: operation, safety, maintenance, custom programming
· evaluation & repair: pottery wheels, pug mills, slab rollers
· ventilation repair & installation / studio safety & setup consultations
· new & used kiln recommendations / appraisals: buying & selling
· ceramics troubleshooting: clays, glaze, construction, firing, etc.
Joseph Kowalczyk (Ko-väl-chick)
kiln & ceramics specialist
510 601-5053 · NorCalKilnRepair@gmail.com
www.norcalkilnrepair.com

ACGA NETWORKING EXPLAINED
Address changes and Membership Changes – Please send all address changes to the membership chair EmilYanos,
acgamembership@gmail.com

.
ACGA’s Website – Check out our website

The home page now features an ‘artist of the month.’ Populate your own page, and update often. To create and edit your profi  le page, go to the For Members menu, choose Member login, and follow the instructions to find and edit your profile.
Need a website password? Email Emil Yanos at
acgamembership@gmail.com

We look forward to hearing from you!

Follow and Like us on FaceBook (@ClayandGlass) and Instagram (@theACGA)
The ACGA News is sent through MailChimp. If your email bounces you or you have been unsubscribed, you can sign up again – contact Communications Lead Ren Lee at: news@acga.net.

Join the ACGA social media group www.facebook.com/groups/ACGASocialMedia

GOOGLE GROUP
Link to the Google group: the-acga@googlegroups.com

To email all members via the ACGA Google group you must be a member. Address your clay/glass-related message to: the-acga@googlegroups.com
There are two ways that you can engage in google groups without a gmail account:
1. Via email only
With a non-gmail email address you can still participate in all of the google group activities by replying to emailsand/or sending an email to the-acga@googlegroups.com to start a new thread. You do not have to create any google accounts to do this. If you’re seeing this email, then you’re in the group and can respond to emails like this one that will be sent to the entire group.

More details on how to create and respond to google group messages in the FAQ!
2. Make a google account
While it’s not necessary to have a google account to participate in the google group, you can create one with your non-gmail email address to get access to the google group site, which just aggregates the ACGA google group conversations in one place that’s easy to review and search.

Board of Directors – 2023
2023 Officers
President: Mari Emori
Vice President: TBD
Secretary: Sally Jackson
Treasurer: April Zilber
Lee Middleman, Jan Schachter, Joe Battiato, Emil Yanos, Trudy Chiddix, Cheryl Costantini,
Chris Johnson, Ren Lee, Susie Rubenstein, Iver Hennig, Sonja Hinrichson, Vicki Gunter, Barbara Prodaniuk

Committee Chairs
Communication – Ren Lee
Exhibitions – Jan Schachter
Festival Liaison – April Zilber
Festival Jury Coordinator – Chris Johnson
Historian – Cuong Ta
Int’l Ambassador – Barbara Brown
Membership Coordinator – Emil Yanos

By |2023-08-10T17:52:00-07:00August 10th, 2023|Newsletter|Comments Off on Newsletter August 2023

ACGA CLAY & GLASS ARTISTS CELEBRATE SUCCESS!

I extend my heartfelt gratitude for the incredible success of the 30th ACGA Clay and Glass Festival, held on July 15th and 16th. Your presence and unwavering support have helped to build our Festival into a Palo Alto tradition.

A special acknowledgment goes to our talented artists, 110 in total, including 18 new talents, whose limitless creativity illuminated the Festival and ignited inspiration in us all. To our treasured visitors and patrons, your purchases serve as a direct endorsement of our artists’ journey and our shared community; your support is cherished.

Each artist’s creation is a manifestation of their heart and soul, a unique piece that takes on its own life. Observing the connections formed between customers and these works is the pinnacle of my experience as an artist at the Festival. This distinct experience cannot be replicated elsewhere, like online sales or gallery representation. Many fellow artists at the Festival echoed the same sentiment.

This is a moment to extend gratitude to our esteemed partners: the city of Palo Alto and the Palo Alto Art Center. Your steady support spanning three decades has been the foundation on which this Festival thrives. Let’s also acknowledge the invaluable contributions of the Festival Committee, the Marketing Team, and our Producer, Messenger Events. Your tireless efforts behind the scenes have played a pivotal role in ensuring the Festival’s continuing success.

Congratulations are due to the winners of the inaugural “People’s Choice Award”: Ren Lee (clay-tied), Kevin Scheer (clay/new artist-tied), and Daniel Wooddell (glass/new artist). This unique program has enriched our Festival experience, and we thank everyone who voted and celebrated their exceptional talents.

As we reflect on this year’s Festival, we recognize that every event offers insights for growth. We have much to learn from this experience and are steadfast in our commitment to continuing to work on improvements. The thought of coming together again, surrounded by art and our wonderful community, really gets us excited. Until that moment comes around, please take care and continue to nurture your creative endeavors!

With genuine gratitude,

Mari Emori, ACGA Board President, and Board of Directors

By |2023-08-09T09:08:35-07:00August 9th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on ACGA CLAY & GLASS ARTISTS CELEBRATE SUCCESS!

TERRACOTTA CORRIDOR

“Clay pipe was invented for specific uses; it never would have been invented for art. It took a few ceramics geniuses to imagine new possibilities.” — Tom Franco, Mission Clay artist-in-residence

Have you been introduced to the captivating world of the Terracotta Corridor? This expansive outdoor exhibition is now on display in Napa’s Rail Arts District and boasts 21 impressive clay pipe sculptures. Presented by Mission Clay Products and Rail Arts District Napa (RAD), it’s a fusion of artistry and industry that’s truly a sight to behold. Curated with care by Shelly Willis and John Toki, the exhibition features selections from 11 exceptional artists, including Alan ChinCameron CrawfordAnn ChristensonCarolyn FordTom FrancoRobert HarrisonSusannah Israel, Lisa ReinertsonPatrick Siler, John Toki, and Rimas VisGirda. These artists brought their creations to life during residencies at the esteemed Mission Clay Art & Industry Program. Remarkably, a total of 21 sculptures made their journey to Napa.

I had the privilege of attending an enthralling presentation on the Terracotta Corridor by John Toki and Bryan Vansell, the visionary Founder and Director of the Mission Clay Art & Industry Program. This event unfolded during the California Conference for the Advancement of Ceramic Art (CCACA) in Davis a few months back. Some participating artists shared their experiences during the presentation. Hearing their stories, challenges, and inventive solutions was fascinating. Can you imagine some artists had to complete the process of carving and glazing the 6 to 8 feet clay pipe extrusions within days due to the fast drying speed at the location of the residency program in Phoenix, Arizona? Following the enlightening presentation was a book signing for the recently unveiled exhibition catalog. This beautifully illustrated 80-page catalog delves into the history of the Art & Industry Program, the sculptures themselves, and the brilliant ceramic artists behind them, adding depth and dimension to the viewer’s journey. 

What makes this exhibition unique is its ingenious concept and dynamic viewing experience. The exhibit harmoniously blends creativity and industry with the Mission Clay Products facility, renowned for its sewer pipe production, which also serves as the very origin of these extraordinary sculptures. This fusion transforms ordinary sewer pipes intended to be underground and unseen into impressive standing masterpieces. As John aptly noted, “Unique to the viewing experience is that artworks in most cases viewed in ‘in motion’—people traveling on the Napa Wine Train at 20 miles per hour, people on bicycles and scooters, and those running or walking or even driving around the city of Napa near the Vine Trail.”

Why not treat yourself to a day of artistic exploration? Experience the enchantment of the Terracotta Corridor in Napa and witness the transformative power of clay, passion, and imagination. I’m excitedly planning my visit. The exhibition is accessible along the Napa Vine Trail, Oxbow Public Marketplace, and near the Culinary Institute of America (Copia) until December 2023. You can see the location of the sculptures on this map

If you want to know more about this amazing project, an exquisite exhibition catalog titled “Terracotta Corridor” is available now at the Napa Wine Train Gift Shop at 1275 McKinstry Street in Napa. If you are interested but can’t make it to Napa, the link to purchase the catalog will soon be added to the RAD website. Owning this catalog is like holding a piece of the exhibition’s magic. 

And, make sure to check out these captivating short videos: 

Installation of Terracotta Corridor – Rail Arts District, Napa, CA. 2022 

Mission Clay Art & Industry – Making Pipe Sculpture 2022

Submitted by Mari Emmori    (image: exhibition catalog cover)

By |2023-08-09T18:54:37-07:00August 9th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on TERRACOTTA CORRIDOR

Kanayama Woodfiring Workshop – September 17 to October 8, 2023

Lee Middleman will host a woodfiring event in Aomori, Japan (September 17 to October 8, 2023) accompanied by 2 American and Canadian potters: ACGA members Miki Shim-Rutter and Chelsea Fried and Alan Lacovesty.  Lee has participated and organized over 10 such events since 2004

Beginning 2002, over 130 ceramic artists and potters from around the world have been selected to participate in similar woodfire programs at Kanayama. The program ended in 2012.  The program focused on the exchange of techniques and ideas about ceramic art and wood fire. By working together and freely sharing information, the sponsors encouraged mutual understanding and cooperation among potters throughout the world.  Lee hopes this  mini-program revives the tradition.

They will also explore the Jōmon ceramic history and Aomori culture.  The Jōmon pottery (縄文土器Jōmon doki) is a type of ancient earthenware pottery which was made during Jomon period (c. 14,000 and 300 BC) in Japan. . The term “Jōmon” (縄文) means “rope-patterned” in Japanese, describing the patterns that are pressed into the clay.  Fragments have been dated as early as 14,500 BCE.

This is Lee’s first return trip to Japan since Covid interrupted his strong interest in exploring Japanese ceramics and culture.  He will post activities and results on social media.

By |2023-08-08T18:33:37-07:00August 8th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on Kanayama Woodfiring Workshop – September 17 to October 8, 2023

A Seat at the Table and More

Linda S. Fitz Gibbon will be participating in several upcoming exhibitions in August/September: Clay Art Center, NY “Functional Fall: A Seat at the Table”, Juror Jessica Putnam Phillips; Axis Gallery “In Limbo: 18th National Juried Exhibition”, Juror Emily Zaiden; LH Horton Jr. Gallery at San Joaquin Delta College “Visions in Clay”  Juror Joan Takayama-Ogawa; Cosumnes River College Art Gallery Faculty Exhibition, and the Verge Center for the Arts Sac Open Studio Preview Exhibition. Her studio will be open to the public Weekend 1: Sept. 9/10 from 10am to 5pm.

By |2023-08-08T09:28:10-07:00August 8th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on A Seat at the Table and More

Newsletter July 2023

ACGA Newsletter May 2023
ACGA Clay and Glass Festival 2023

CELEBRATING 30 YEARS
OF BRINGING THE BEST OF THE BEST
TO THE ACGA CLAY & GLASS FESTIVAL

ACGA 30th Annual Clay and Glass Festival
ACGA 30th Annual Clay and Glass Festival
ACGA 30th Annual Clay and Glass Festival

The ACGA Clay & Glass Festival celebrates 30 years on July 15-16, 2023, on the grounds of the Palo Alto Art Center, 1313 Newell Road. The Festival is known for its high quality, unique handcrafted clay and glass art. All the participating 100+ artists are members of the Association of Clay and Glass Artists of California (ACGA) and have been juried in – with the top artists across California participating.

It takes a special
arts festival to not
only survive, but
thrive, for 30 years.

Festival hours will be 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, July 15, and Sunday, July 16. Admission is free. The Festival features a wide range of both functional and decorative fine art, from the abstract to the figurative, and from the minimalist to whimsical. Valet parking will be available at the Art Center for only $12. There will be live demos both days, and an Interactive Clay for All activity in the Art Center Courtyard. There will also be food trucks including ice cream, popsicles, and yes, coffee.

Watching art come to life through live demos has been a popular tradition at the ACGA Clay & Glass Festival. Find them outside near the Newell Road end of the Art Center building.

This year’s demo schedule includes:

Saturday, July 15
10 a.m. – Ian Bassett – Clay
Techniques for pottery forms
Noon – Chris Johnson – Glass
Glasswork techniques
1 p.m. – Alka Bhargava – Ikebana
2 p.m. – Ellen Sachtschale – Clay –Techniques
for creating textured, curvaceous garden
vessels using pinching and slab techniques

Sunday, July 16
10 a.m. – Chris Parris – Clay – Forms from wet
clay, including folding delicate edges and
fluidity
11 a.m. – Alka Bhargava – Ikebana
Noon – Don Jower – Clay – How to throw small
and large forms
2 p.m. – Sally Jackson – Clay – How to make a
stacked ceramic totem for the garden

NEW THIS YEAR: PRIZES!

Sign up for our newsletter for a chance
to win a $100 gift certificate!
Each day of the festival we will have a drawing for a $100 gift certificate valid to shop during the Festival this year or next year. To enter the drawing, drop by the ACGA Information Table near the Newell Road entrance to the Art Center and sign up for the ACGA Newsletter.

Vote for your favorite artist!
Recognize your favorite clay and glass artists in our People’s Choice Award: a $100 gift certificate awarded to the artist who gets the most votes to use at the Festival. Vote on Saturday before 4:30 pm using the ballot on the map handout, or pick up a ballot form at the ACGA Information Table.

SUPPORT FOR ARTISTS

Check out the CERF+ (Craft Emergency Relief Fund) Booth rin the Sculpture Gardent and donate to support artists in need due to catastrophic events.

Bay Area residents have been huge clay and glass art patrons for 30 years, supporting the arts and the artists. “We are so appreciative of our customers’ past patronage,” said Mari Emori, ACGA Board President.

“We invite everyone to
come celebrate with us
July 15 and 16 to see the latest works from our juried artists.
It’s a great time to shop for home and family and support our California artists.”

Details, including links to participating artists’ work are available at ACGA Clay & Glass Festival

WHY? WOULD YOU PAY $50 FOR A MUG WHEN YOU CAN GET ONE FOR NEXT TO NOTHING AT IKEA, WALMART, POTTERY BARN…?

Let’s consider the handmade mug. The artist shapes it, considers the height, the belly, the handle, every square millimeter of its surface, its finish, and its attitude. Is it calm? Is it stimulating? How does the rim feel on the lips? Does the surface feel right? Is it plain or decorated? Do the colors satisfy? How many fingers fit the handle, and is there a pinky hook or a thumb rest? What’s going on with the foot, and is there an easter egg on the bottom?

Once built, the mug must be fired, glazed, and fired again. Every step in the process offers opportunities for ecstacy or desolation. When it survives, it is the product not just of the time it takes to make this one piece, but of all the time the potter has invested in mastering their craft, and all the history of pottery that has informed traditions.

By the time an object arrives at the ACGA Clay & Glass Festival in Palo Alto, it has already developed a legacy. Each artist maker participating in the festival has had their work scrutinized by a jury to determine the quality of craftsmanship, design, originality, and personal artistic expression and to ensure that the work shown in the festival is the best and highest quality of work to be found in California. The work that goes into an art glass vessel or a clay sculpture or an object that has everyday function elevated to transcendent art is the artist’s labor of love. It comes from passion and drive and it reflects and exudes the artist’s investment, creating a dynamic aura in the space where it resides.

Invest yourself in better living. Collect some handmade treasures at the ACGA Clay & Glass Festival in Palo Alto.
Mug maker credits, top to bottom, left to right:
Pierre Bounaud @pbounaud, Ross Spangler @rossspangler.studio, Vince Montague @vincemontague, Ian Bassett @craftrider, Bev Zerbib-Berda @bevzerbibberdapottery, Jordan King @jkingceramics, Pierre Bounaud @pbounaud, Kevin Scheer @kevinscheerpottery, Malia Landis @malia_landis, Taka Unno @takaunnoceramics, Tina Fossella @tinafossellapottery, Janet Wolf @janetwolfceramics, Chanda Beck @ezmedesigns, Miki Shim @mikisr_ceramics, Susie Rubenstein @susier_rubenstein, Sandra Torres @sandratorresporcelain

ACGA 30th Annual Clay and Glass Festival
ACGA 30th Annual Clay and Glass Festival

CERF+ HAS BEEN SUPPORTING CALIFORNIA ARTISTS FOR OVER 30 YEARS

CERF Artist Support

From the very beginning of the Clay and Glass Festival, the ACGA has been raising money for the California Fund at CERF+ (Craft Emergency Relief Fund).

Jan Schachter, who along with James Aarons, has been leading the CERF+ fundraiser at the show recalls “Initially we gave out CERF info and sold CERF+ merchandise — tees, aprons, tote bags, notecards — and of course asked for donations. In 2000, someone suggested we make & sell millennial mugs, which we did. That started the process of our artists donating work to sell. Over the years other organizations have donated their members’ work to us to sell – Baulines Crafts Guild and CGAF Ceramics and Glass Foundations. We have also sold the work of collectors, who have donated pieces to us.”

Thanks to the ongoing generosity of artists at the ACGA Clay and Glass Festival who donate work to sell at the CERF+ booth at the show, these efforts have raised over $60,000 to support the California Fund at CERF+. With these funds, CERF+ is able to provide vital emergency relief funds to craft artists after fires, floods, illnesses, injuries, and more.

“Uncertain times and financial worries are a constant reminder of how difficult it is to be a professional artist, and after my car accident and cervical spine surgery, the reality was unimaginable. I am forever grateful that organizations like CERF+ exist and can offer help in times of need. I am on the road to recovery and still work at my art as a Glassblower!” – Paul Counts, San Marcos, California

To date, over one hundred craft artists have received emergency relief grants that include funds raised by ACGA members to support the California Fund at CERF+. “This fundraiser, driven by artists for artists, embodies the spirit of CERF+’s mutual aid origins,” notes CERF+ executive director, Ruby Lopez Harper. “This support is especially meaningful as we continue to support more artists every year who have been affected by climate-related disasters in California.”

To learn more about CERF+, visit www.cerfplus.org

Submitted by Carrie Cleveland, carrie@craftemergency.org

Meet Your Board Member JOE BATTIATO, CLAY

I came into ceramics because I wanted to take an easy class in college. Jim Wayne was the instructor. I was seventeen and I had no idea that it would be a life changing experience.

Jim was my mentor until I got drafted. After I served my time, I carved out a studio in my garage where I worked for five years until we moved where I developed my basement studio setting up kilns in the back yard.

While my wife, Cheryl, was working on her MFA at San Jose State I was introduced to Stan Welsh. I ended up working with Stan for the next twenty years there. Able to retire from my day job in 2000, I was then able to do my pottery full time. I started expanding doing shows and teaching a various venues, including Palo Alto Art Center, Higher Fire, Mother Earth, and Cabrillo College. I’m still at SJSU as a resident artist.

I fine tuned my pit firing skills with San Jose State and got to give pit fire workshops from Ocean Beach to Orlando, Florida.

Joining ACGA was a step in the direction of becoming a professional potter for me. Being able to be with other career, ceramic artists has meant a lot to me for the past thirty years.
One of my greatest joys was being able to throw pots for James Lovera when age kept him away from his potter’s wheel.

Submitted by Joe Battiato, Festival Committee

Joe Battiato - ACGA Board Member
Joe Battiato - ACGA Board Member
Sally Jackson

Sally Jackson, Three Books, 2023

The Art of a Story

13th Annual Juried Exhibition
Village Theater & Art Gallery
233 Front Street, Danville, CA 94526
June 9-August 11, 2023
Three ceramic pieces by Sally Jackson are included in this multi-media exhibition, which features art inspired by books, stories, and literary themes. Open Monday and Tuesday by appointment, Wednesday-Friday 12 – 5 pm, and Saturday 11 – 3 pm. Stop by if you’re in Danville — the gallery is close to I-680 just off Diablo Drive.

Click here for more details: Village Theater and Art Gallery

Majolica Garden – Ceramics by Liz Lauter

The San Geronimo Valley Community Center debuts Liz Lauter’s Tree of Life solo ceramics collection July 3-28. Her recent work features elaborately embellished Arbol de la Vida candelabra forms, wall mounted sculptures and “istoriato” painted platters with narrative themes of Adam & Eve in the Garden of Eden as seen from Eve’s perspective. She uses the traditional Italian majolica technique of terra cotta clay, tin glaze and vibrant hand painted overglaze colors.

Liz’s clay artwork weaves threads of Mexican folk art, Islamic design, and botanical illustration into her own form of expression which is new at the same time familiar. They all meet in her Garden of Eden.

Gallery Hours: 12-5 and M-F from 10-5
Artist Reception Sunday, July 9th from 4-7

Liz Lauter

Liz Lauter

Chris Johnson Glass
Chris Johnson Glass

GET INSIDE ART – JULY 29-30
THE DOONART ANNUAL STUDIO TOUR

Chris Johnson Glass will again be participating in this unique event in which artists in the Santa Cruz Mountains and in the village of Davenport open their studios to the public. ​Hidden within the majestic redwood forests of Bonny Doon and on the Pacific Coast in the historic village of Davenport you will discover the wonderful art created in this quiet and inspiring environment.
For more details and a list of the participating artists, please visit
http://www.doonarttour.com/index.html

Submitted by Chris Johnson

Animal Portraiture - Mendocino Art Center

Alternative Materials and Finishes – Stretching the Creative Process

WORKSHOP WITH ROCKY LEWYCKY

LOCATION: Mendocino Art Center

INSTRUCTOR: Rocky Lewycky
CLASS TITLE: Alternative Materials and Finishes: Stretching the Creative Process
DATE(S):  August 21 – 27, 2023
DAYS OF WEEK: Monday – Sunday
HOURS: 9:30 am to 4:30 pm
SKILL LEVEL: Intermediate/Advanced

COST: $1155

The heart of this workshop is in the exploration of alternative firings. We will be working and exploring everyday with new firing techniques and processes. Students will bring both greenware and bisqueware to the workshop to fulfill each process. You can visit my website and click on “workshops” to see examples of what you will be learning in the workshop. Below is a list of firings that we will be exploring:

–   Ferric Chloride Saggar Burritos
–   Ferric Chloride Spray Over Clear Crackle
–   Pit Fire over Greenware Terra-Sigillata Base
–   Pit Fire over Bisqueware Terra-Sigillata with Mica Colorants Base
–   Horse Hair/Feather Firing with GreenwareTerra-Sigillata Base
–   Cone 7 Seashell Side-Fire with Matte Crystal Glazes (Oxidation)
–   Cone 11 Side-Fire Shino with Wood Ash (Reduction)

Along with our exploration of alternative firing techniques, we will also spend some time experimenting with alternative materials and surface treatments.  will demonstrate how to make and use the following:

–   Greenware Greek Style Terra Sigillata (Greenware)
–   Greenware Terra-Sigillata with Mason Stain Colorants
–   Bisqueware Terra Sigillata with Mica Colorants
–   Paper Clay with Burnout Legumes
–   Feldspar Inclusions
–   Micaceous Clay

Finally, I will teach you how to clean and finish your pots with the following techniques:
–   Dremel Tool Sanding of Side Fire Wares
–   Wax Sealing of Low Fire Wares
–   Introduction to Gold Leafing Materials and Sizing Demo

**Please note that you will need to purchase an organic vapor mask to participate in the Ferric Chloride processes  (~$45). In preparation for the workshop, you will need approximately 20-40 small to medium pieces at various stages of completion. Please allow enough time for this planning. Detailed information will be provided upon registration.

Submitted by Rocky Lewycky @rockylewycky, http://www.rocksart.com/workshops-2

ONGOING: Landscape Perspectives

June 2–July 22, 2023
June 9, 5–8pm: Reception and Art Walk
July 14, 5–8pm: Reception and Art Walk

Artworks Downtown Marin
Gallery 1337

The exhibit, Landscape Perspectives, reimagines and celebrates traditional landscape-based artwork by offering a diverse collection of expressions, approaches, and interpretations. From realism to surrealism, to abstraction, and beyond; viewers will surely enjoy this multi-dimensional experience. Features works by ACGA members Emil Yanos and Kathy Pallie.

Submitted by Emil Yanos

Emil Yanos

Emil Yanos “Outcropping” Ceramic wall sculpture, Thrown, carved and altered. Ungerglazes, fired to cone 5. 10.75″h x 10.75″w x 3.25″d

Emil Yanos, Outcropping, 2023. Ceramic wall sculpture, thrown, carved and altered. Underglazes, fired to cone 5. 10.75″h x 10.75″w x 3.25″d

ONGOING: NY2CA Gallery Presents “Reciprocity”

NY2CA Gallery Presents “Reciprocity”

A Two Person Exhibition
by Melina Meza
and Melissa Woodburn

June 8 – Aug. 6
Artists’ Reception June 10, 3–6pm
617 – 1st Street, Benicia, CA

Immerse yourself in the beauty of artistic expressions and celebrate the reciprocal relationship between art, nature, and the human spirit. At the reception for artists, experience visual delight, harmonious sounds, and culinary pleasures as they seamlessly come together at this extraordinary exhibition.

Submitted by Melissa Woodburn

Glass Hart Open Studios

HOW RECENT CHANGES TO OUR ACGA COMMUNICATIONS HELP OUR MEMBERS

Our communications tools now allow members to post their news items directly to the ACGA News Blog, for daily publication. Posts must be admin-approved and may take up to 48 hours to appear in the blog. Incomplete submissions may take longer. The web-based news blog is a living document and posts items in the order they are published. You can scroll through the entire history of the ACGA News here: https://acga.net/acga-news/.

In addition, our monthly ACGA newsletter is emailed to approximately 5500 subscribers. This news is less time-sensitive than more immediate forms of communication such as the news blog and our social media accounts on Instagram and Facebook.

Social media is the most effective and most instantaneous way to reach your audience, provide a platform that can be posted to repeatedly and often. We encourage members to cultivate their own social media accounts on facebook and instagram, to build your own audience and market your wares. We are happy to amplify your message to our followers from time to time when the following conditions are met:

  • Captions must include who, what, where, when details.
  • Posts must relate to something a collector or student can engage with such as a gallery event, an open studio, or an upcoming sale. Posts that lack context will not be reposted.
  • We will not repost items projecting more than 2 weeks in the future.
  • Posts should be tagged @theacga to ensure we can find them

ACGA social media accounts have more than 17,000 followers, so following these guidelines could be valuable to you. News items must be written in grammatically correct form, include all details including names (first and last) of members involved, links to artist websites or social media, studio or gallery locations and hours of operation.

Be aware that we have over 350 members and will strive to be fair and equitable, and to showcase the wide variety of accomplished artists who comprise our group. Publication is not guaranteed, and is not a perquisite of membership. If you have an event with frequent updates or an extended window of time, we expect you to manage your news on your end and we may or may not repost at our discretion.

CLICK HERE FOR SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

ACGA GENERAL MEETING MINUTES – June 12, 2023

Date of Next Meeting: Monday, August 14, 2023, 5:30pm

READ JUNE MEETING MINUTES
All ACGA members in good standing are invited to attend our monthly board meeting on zoom. To receive a zoom invitation for the next meeting, email your request to Mari Emori, emori.mari@gmail.com.

LISTINGS

SEE EVENTS CALENDAR:
https://acga.net/events-calendar/
This space is envisioned for future listings of upcoming calendar events. Since we have only just launched the submission process in this mailing, we do not have any current events at this time. Please follow the submission process outlined herein.

Professional Kiln Repair Service
NorCal Kiln Repair- “Professional Bay Area repair service since 2006”
· evaluation & repair: ceramic & glass kilns (gas & electric)
· tutorials: operation, safety, maintenance, custom programming
· evaluation & repair: pottery wheels, pug mills, slab rollers
· ventilation repair & installation / studio safety & setup consultations
· new & used kiln recommendations / appraisals: buying & selling
· ceramics troubleshooting: clays, glaze, construction, firing, etc.
Joseph Kowalczyk (Ko-väl-chick)
kiln & ceramics specialist
510 601-5053 · NorCalKilnRepair@gmail.com
www.norcalkilnrepair.com

ACGA NETWORKING EXPLAINED
Address changes and Membership Changes – Please send all address changes to the membership chair EmilYanos,
acgamembership@gmail.com

.
ACGA’s Website – Check out our website

The home page now features an ‘artist of the month.’ Populate your own page, and update often. To create and edit your profi  le page, go to the For Members menu, choose Member login, and follow the instructions to find and edit your profile.
Need a website password? Email Emil Yanos at
acgamembership@gmail.com

We look forward to hearing from you!

Follow and Like us on FaceBook (@ClayandGlass) and Instagram (@theACGA)
The ACGA News is sent through MailChimp. If your email bounces you or you have been unsubscribed, you can sign up again – contact Communications Lead Ren Lee at: news@acga.net.

Join the ACGA social media group www.facebook.com/groups/ACGASocialMedia

GOOGLE GROUP
Link to the Google group: the-acga@googlegroups.com

To email all members via the ACGA Google group you must be a member. Address your clay/glass-related message to: the-acga@googlegroups.com
There are two ways that you can engage in google groups without a gmail account:
1. Via email only
With a non-gmail email address you can still participate in all of the google group activities by replying to emailsand/or sending an email to the-acga@googlegroups.com to start a new thread. You do not have to create any google accounts to do this. If you’re seeing this email, then you’re in the group and can respond to emails like this one that will be sent to the entire group.

More details on how to create and respond to google group messages in the FAQ!
2. Make a google account
While it’s not necessary to have a google account to participate in the google group, you can create one with your non-gmail email address to get access to the google group site, which just aggregates the ACGA google group conversations in one place that’s easy to review and search.

Board of Directors – 2023
2023 Officers
President: Mari Emori
Vice President: TBD
Secretary: Sally Jackson
Treasurer: April Zilber
Lee Middleman, Jan Schachter, Joe Battiato, Emil Yanos, Trudy Chiddix, Cheryl Costantini,
Chris Johnson, Ren Lee, Susie Rubenstein, Iver Hennig, Sonja Hinrichson, Vicki Gunter, Barbara Prodaniuk

Committee Chairs
Communication – Ren Lee
Exhibitions – Jan Schachter
Festival Liaison – April Zilber
Festival Jury Coordinator – Chris Johnson
Historian – Cuong Ta
Int’l Ambassador – Barbara Brown
Membership Coordinator – Emil Yanos

By |2023-07-09T21:42:55-07:00July 9th, 2023|Newsletter|Comments Off on Newsletter July 2023

ACGA Board of Directors Meeting Minutes: June 12, 2023

Agenda

Welcome (Mari)

Robert’s Rules of Order (Mari)

Communications (Susie)

Treasurer’s Report (April)

Festival Report (April)

Artist Demonstrations at the Festival (Joe)

Eligibility of Enamel Work in Festival (Emil)

Date of Next Meeting & Adjourn

The meeting began at 6 p.m. via Zoom

Present: Mari Emori, Cheryl Costantini, April Zilber, Lee Middleman, Emil Yanos, Trudy Chiddix, Joseph Battiato, Barbara Prodaniuk, Susie Rubenstein, Ren Lee, Chris Johnson, Vicki Gunter, Sonja Hinrichsen, Iver Hennig (recorder)

Absent: Sally Jackson, Jan Schachter

Guest: Julie Taber

Welcome (Mari)

This meeting’s timekeeper is Trudy C., stack taker is Barbara P., and substitute recorder is Iver H.

Robert’s Rules of Order (Mari E.)

Mari asked the Board to read and understand Robert’s Rules of Order so that our meetings will run more smoothly.

Communications (Susie R.) 

Our festival publicist, Kathy Bentaieb, has provided a marketing plan summarizing tasks completed and tasks ahead. These include ads in appropriate newsletters and local papers, posts on social media, notifications to our mailing list, a postcard design, and promotional materials for artists to send out to their own mailing lists. There will also be pitches to local TV stations as well as more social media reels featuring festival artists. Board members suggested that we all use a consistent subject line in our communications about the festival. There was also a request for more specifics about how money for publicity is being spent.

Treasurer’s Report (April)

April asked for permission to give Julie Taber, who will be taking over as Treasurer, viewing and downloading privileges for the the Bank of America and PayPal accounts so she can practice preparing reports this year. A vote was taken and the motion passed at 6:25 pm. April reviewed the April and May 2023 financial reports. Cheryl asked if we were looking into banking options to maximize interest rates.

Festival Report (April)  April is waiting to hear from Annie about the cost for security. Booth and volunteer assignments for festival artists have been sent. There are now 111 artists signed up to show at the festival; 18 are showing for the first time. “New Artist” booth signs will be provided to these new artists. It was proposed that next year ACGA retain $20 for administrative expenses from artists who request a booth fee refund. The motion passed at 6:40 pm.

Clay for All is back this year. ACGA volunteers and staff working in this area must make sure that cleanup is thorough, as this has been a concern in the past. It was proposed that a QR code be displayed to make it easier to sign up for our mailing list, and that the information table not have new members volunteering there. A motion to invite Cobb Mountain Art and Ecology to have a sales booth at the festival passed after our Board meeting in May. Cobb Mountain has accepted the invitation for this year’s festival. Bagels and donuts for artists will return to the festival this year. The Artist Party only has a $500 budget, so there will probably be a BYO component.

Artist Demonstrations at the Festival (Joe B.)

Demos will be held on the lawn this year. We’ll need a pottery wheel and a table. One demo spot on Saturday remains to be filled.

Eligibility of Enamel Work in the Clay & Glass Festival (Emil Y.)

The Board considered whether ACGA might allow enamel artists to apply for festival eligibility. Enamel, which is powdered glass fused to a metal backing, does incorporate glass and heat but has not been considered for acceptance in the past. Here are the main points of the discussion:

Glass must be the primary feature. Does the work focus on the chemistry of the glasswork? How much metal is showing? What aspects of the work attract attention?

Which cohort of ACGA should be involved in setting new precedents like this? Should it be the Board of Directors, or the entire membership? Clay and glass will remain our primary focus, but as ACGA evolves and grows, we must emphasize inclusivity and open-mindedness. In the coming weeks, the board will consider the issues, do research, and try to come to a consensus at our August board meeting.

The meeting adjourned at 7:47 pm.

Next Meeting: 5:30 p.m., Monday, August 14, 2023 via Zoom

By |2023-06-29T09:17:04-07:00June 29th, 2023|Board Meeting|Comments Off on ACGA Board of Directors Meeting Minutes: June 12, 2023

“The Art of a Story” in Danville

The Art of a Story

13th Annual Juried Exhibition

Village Theater & Art Gallery

233 Front Street, Danville, CA 94526

June 9-August 11, 2023

Three ceramic pieces by Sally Jackson are included in this multi-media exhibition, which features art inspired by books, stories, and literary themes.  Open Monday and Tuesday by appointment, Wednesday-Friday 12 – 5 pm, and Saturday 11 – 3 pm.  Stop by if you’re in Danville — the gallery is close to I-680 just off Diablo Drive. Shown here: Three Books, 2023

Click here for more details:  Village Theater and Art Gallery

By |2023-06-29T09:17:34-07:00June 29th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on “The Art of a Story” in Danville

Newsletter June 2023

ACGA Newsletter May 2023

SAVE THE DATE!
JULY 15-16, PALO ALTO ART CENTER
30TH ANNUAL ACGA CLAY & GLASS FESTIVAL

ACGA 30th Annual Clay and Glass Festival
ACGA 30th Annual Clay and Glass Festival
ACGA 30th Annual Clay and Glass Festival

Who’s looking forward to the 2023 ACGA Clay & Glass Festival in Palo Alto? We can’t wait! The Festival celebrates 30 years on July 15-16 at the Palo Alto Art Center, 1313 Newell Road.

“For 30 years, ACGA artists have brought their fi nest clay and glass creations to Palo Alto, and we are so appreciative of our customers’ past patronage,” said Mari Emori, ACGA Board President.
“We invite everyone to come celebrate with us July 15 and 16 to see the latest works from our juried artists. It’s a great time to shop for home and family while supporting our California artists.”

“We invite everyone to come celebrate with us July 15 and 16 to see the latest works from our juried artists. It’s a great time to shop for home and family while supporting our California artists.”

Scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, July 15 and 16, at the Palo Alto Art Center, 1313 Newell Road, this year promises to be an awesome art experience for all.

For two days, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., California’s top clay and glass artists will off er their finest work for purchase. More than 100 juried artists are participating.

There will also be live demos, food and drink. Admission is free, and valet parking is available.

From functional to fine art, the beloved ACGA Clay & Glass Festival has it all. ACGA artists are still welcome to participate by contacting Festival Producer Annie Hermes of Messenger Events at annie@messengerevents.com.

30th Annual ACGA Clay & Glass Festival July 15 - 16

FIRST TIME FESTIVAL EXHIBITORS – SNEAK PEEK!

Glenn Evans - 2023 ACGA Clay & Glass Festival

Taka Unno

I am a ceramicist based in San Francisco. I am fascinated by the concept of beauty in imperfection. My ultimate goal is to reflect the concept in my ceramic design and create flow and harmony.

I hope you will enjoy my works.

Taka Unno

Gabriela Montufar - student ACGA

Cory Ballis

I work with hand blown glass that is melted in a furnace.  Before I start blowing glass I will hand mix 10+ colors that I will use throughout my body of work. Once I have the correct amount of glass I will add color to the outside of the vessel.  This gives the glass a textured finish.  This texture is achieved by different colors stretching and expanding at different rates and it feels very nice in the hand.  The vessel is then blown to shape.  For my drinkware I use blow molds to achieve roughly a common shape.

Cory Ballis

Fred Stodder - 2023 ACGA CLay & Glass Festival

Fred Stodder

Fred Stodder grew up in Laguna Beach California and began seriously studying ceramics at age 16. By the time he was 18 he was exhibiting his ceramic work. He went on to receive a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the University of California, Irvine.

His ceramic art is regularly exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the country. He is the recipient of numerous awards, appears in many important collections and has been featured in Ceramics Monthly as well as other national arts publications. Fred has exhibited at the Festival of Arts for at least 30 years.

Fred Stodder

Tamara Danoyan - 2023 ACGA CLay & Glass Festival

Tamara Danoyan

I am inspired by lithop and conophytum plants, which grow in South Africa and Namibia. I am inspired by their size, coloring, and button-like shape. Another body of work would be sculptural vessels. These pieces are bisqued and then printed on with various leaves and flowers. The process is called eco printing or botanical printing. The plants leave their imprints and give their pigment to clay. You never know for sure what you are going to get. The transformation continues as the moisture dissipates: certain colors fade, others appear, new shapes come through.

Tamara Danoyan

MEMBER NEWS

ACGA Visits Peter Vizzuzi

Peter Vizzuzi Glass Artist
Peter Vizzuzi Glass Artist
Peter Vizzuzi Glass Artist
MoonDoBang 2023 USA Tour

ACGA: Tell us about your journey with Glass. How old were you when you began and when did you first know you wanted it to be your profession?
I found my life’s work, inadvertently- seeing hot glass action across the hall from the ceramics studios at San Jose State where I was an avid student, then at Old Town, Los Gatos, where the self-styled pirate Rick Strini had built a rudimentary furnace. Then, fortuitously, during the Italian section of my post-college European tour, hopelessly lost, November, cold and wet, in the Venetian maze, I boarded the wrong vaporetto and ended up out on Murano where I strolled past a dozen glass studios; furnaces blazing, alive with hot glass activity.  One particular shop seemed welcoming, and I warmed myself, shared some of my American cigarettes, and watched them make some generic tourist ware.

ACGA: What were the most important things you learned that prepared you for life as a glass artist?
By the next year, at age 24, I caught the wave of 1970s, post-college, baby-boom entrepreneurial energy, and landed a hot glass job in Santa Cruz making stems, feet, and punties (for about $8 per hour, and working the booth at the Renaissance Fairs in Novato and L.A., bringing our early goblets and art vessels directly to the market.

This early to mid-70s era was the perfect environment for self invention. Without tradition, and with a scarcity of technique, information, materials, tools, etc. aspiring “glass artists” had to build it themselves.  We salvaged, scavenged, re-purposed, repaired, and “appropriated” when necessary. We spent more time in scrap metal yards than in museums. I traded my sports car for a pickup, grew a beard to look older, learned some very basic combustion engineering and safety systems, got a permit, and built my own studio at the Santa Cruz Art Center.

I need to mention that many of us who worked hot glass in California owe some of our technique, work ethic, and general “hot shop” culture to the young Mexican glass blowers from Guadalajara who worked with us here.

ACGA: What prepared you for a life in glass?

I was a decent ceramicist, I could build things (my dad was a craftsman, a draftsman, and a general contractor), I surfed with my future boss, was enamored of his girlfriend, was ambidextrous with good depth perception. I was attracted to the intense heat, and was generally available.

ACGA:  How Do You Determine Pricing? 

I’ve used the intuitive method. Pricing in just enough profit to maintain a decent lifestyle in our desirable location. There’s a sweet spot in pricing a functional glass or decorative art vessel, a price point that’s reasonable to our customers, but covers the considerable overhead (energy, labor, materials, equipment, shipping, insurance, coffee, etc.).  These days, later in my career, I’m more inclined to hold on to pieces that may represent my work in a future historic collection.

ACGA:  What do you love most? 

Initially I was attracted to the rhythm, choreography, and immediacy of glass making, and I still enjoy the meditative repetition of a productive day.  I’m proud to identify as artigiano, working with traditional techniques, guided by my own design sensibility. On rare occasions, I’ll wander into the studio and be inadvertently  surprised by my own work- the shapes, colors, the iridescence, the textures, and patterns; as if someone else had made them, with myself as medium, briefly communicating with long-forgotten glass masters.

ACGA:  What is your advice to someone considering a career in the crafts? 

Dive deeply into your chosen medium, specialize, master at least one technique, experiment (and record the data), change the formula, break the mold, be alert for the felix culpa, find your own voice. Know your audience and make something they absolutely can’t resist.

ACGA:  People would be surprised to know that…

The late, esteemed Czech glass luminary and master Stanislav Libenský once asked me, across the table at Pilchuck Glass School, to “Please pass the salt”.

Submitted by Cheryl Costantini for Peter Vizzuzi

Remembering Jim  Melchert

Jim Melchert - Artist

Reposted from Nancy M Servis @servisarts

My heart breaks to write these words but my friend Jim Melchert (1930-2023) passed away at his home on June 1st at the age of 93. Over his 50 year career, he has cast a remarkably long shadow of grace and influence in the Bay Area art community. Jim has left behind an inspiring legacy of kindness, curiosity, compassion and a lifetime of uplifting the agency of others. He was part of a generation of artists that made ceramics a contemporary art form. That in itself is an uncommon feat, but, it was his desire to be of service to others more broadly that led him to become the NEA Director of Visual Arts, the director of the American Academy in Rome, and a professor at UC Berkeley. Jim’s life was a light for me, beginning a path that showed me how one could live a life in the arts, both as an artist and one who used their agency to assist others along the way.

Read more about the life and work of Jim Melchert in “Jim Melchert | Works of Resonance” by Nancy M Servis. Originally published in Ceramics: Art and Perception No 100, 2015, reprinted with permission of the author.

Meet Your Board Member Chris Johnson, Hot Glass

Chris Johnson - ACGA Board Member
Chris Johnson - ACGA Board Member

I came to glass through a convoluted process– not through college or employment, but through curiosity. I was pursuing blacksmithing when I was first exposed to glassblowing at the Northern California Renaissance Faire in 1991. I started learning how to work with the medium for a couple of seasons, and really enjoyed it. But then life took over and I didn’t get back to glassblowing for 7 years. In the meantime I enrolled in San Francisco State, where I studied film, print and color management on desktop computers. It turned out that all of that work helped to inform my direction in the medium of glass. During that time I developed a sense of design, and more crucially, color, which is now a central focus for me in my glass art. Another factor that  contributed to being able to pursue glass was the years I had been working as a general contractor, which also provided me with a useful skill set that served me well when it came time  to build my own shop.

In 1999 I was  offered an apprenticeship with Art Ramos, of J. Fine Glass. After a couple of years with Art,  I got a job as the glass studio manager  at the Bay Area Glass Institute (BAGI, and ) a few years later I was hired by Clifford Rainey at The California College of Arts and Crafts (now CCA). I have also taught at MIT and San Jose State University. The time at CCA was invaluable; my time as studio manager allowed me to deepen my knowledge of the craft and learned a wide range of techniques (including fusing and slumping, kiln casting, and cold working)  as well as how to build and maintain a hot shop. I also learned how to manage and mentor a large shop full of college students. This experience at CCA helped me develop and refine my skills, and prepared me to design and build my own hot shop a few years later.

Ultimately I took up glass because it’s potential fascinated me. And I like hot things.

I always figured that when you look at a piece of glass that the first thing you see Is the color; the second thing you see is the shape. I believe that color speaks to us on a very direct level, and has the ability to awaken and energize our awareness. There is no other medium besides glass that places color in such a relationship to light, and it is only by light that we perceive color. Because of the ability of light to pass through and illuminate the glass, we can experience color at its most beautiful intensity. My goal is to continually push the boundaries of the medium in order to explore new possibilities for color so that I can offer truly original pieces that surprise and delight. Though I am always reaching for the new, my work is rooted in an artisan tradition that dates back over two millennia, a tradition I am proud to be a part of. I create each of my pieces — drinking glasses, vases, lighting bells, and sculpture—by hand, using only hand tools and the blowpipe.

I have always added some kind of random element to all of my designs. “Stochastic glass” is the term I use to describe my interest in chance operations in the creation of glass. From the Greek word for “random,” stochastic is a term most commonly used in mathematical probability theory, suggesting the deliberate incorporation of a random element into a set of known variables. The creation of art glass using Stochastic techniques depends upon the ability of the artist to respond to the combination of both unpredictable and known behaviors when molten glass is exposed to intense manipulation such as stretching, reheating, layering, cracking, and crimping. Each piece I create is the happy combination of design, skill, and serendipity.

For example, I have recently been developing a new effect that creates wispy lines and reticulated patterns in certain colors. I call it “fingerprinting.” This new effect complements an old line of work I call the turbulent series, which I am now revisiting, as well as being sufficiently interesting to stand on its own as a design.  It starts with radical manipulation of color prior to shaping the glass. This results in a 3-D like quality in these pieces and produces random designs that lead the viewer to find their own imagery in  each piece (example above).

I love sharing my knowledge of glass and frequently do (my partner claims I  talk about it incessantly). Fortunately I have an outlet; I spend a great deal of my time teaching glass both privately and through our local Cabrillo Community college art’s extension program. There is nothing like the joy expressed by someone’s first taste of working with this magical material. I am currently running lessons in glass blowing Wednesday nights with a group of continuing  students.

I joined the board of ACGA in order to deepen my professional ties to the arts community in our area, and to give back to the community that has supported me. As a board member it has been my privilege to run the jury that selects new members to join our Festival. I have been very proud to watch the jury take such care in discussing and considering each and every applicant with open minds and a critical eye. Every jury is different yet I have noticed one aspect they all share, which is that they all want to arrive at  a clean and bias free conclusion. Watching the deliberation has been wonderful and fascinating. They do not spare their opinions yet they all listen to each other in full measure. I would like to thank each and every juror for taking the many hours it takes to be on the jury and for their service to our group, and for welcoming new artists into the ACGA community.

Submitted by Chris Johnson, ACGA Festival Jury Coordinator @chrisjohnsonglass

WORKSHOPS

Animal Portraiture - Mendocino Art Center

Enrollment now open for Animal Portraiture @mendocinoartcenter
June 23 – 25
Friday–Sunday, 9:30am – 3:30pm
Structure of Class: (3) 6-hour in-person studio sessions
All levels
On-site housing available

@mendocinoartcenter 45200 Little Lake Street, Mendocino, CA 95460,

https://www.mendocinoartcenter.org/classes-1/workshop-2023-animal-portraiture-with-wesley-wright

(707) 937-5818

Join ceramic artist Wesley Wright and learn to sculpt animal heads and portrait busts in clay! Using reference imagery participants can create any animal, exotic, common, or their own pet. This 3-day intensive will give students the opportunity to create detailed, expressive, and refined animal portraits. Wesley will demonstrate hollow building techniques, how to use references imagery, and other processes. Day 1 will focus on establishing the overall form. Day 2 will deal with subtleties of form and begin detail work. Day 3 will address details such as eyes, flesh, musculature, and of course, fur! The final product will be a bust or head sculpture that can be mounted on a wall or free standing.

Reposted from Wesley Wright Instagram

Animal Portraiture - Mendocino Art Center

Alternative Materials and Finishes – Stretching the Creative Process

WORKSHOP WITH ROCKY LEWYCKY

LOCATION: Mendocino Art Center

INSTRUCTOR: Rocky Lewycky
CLASS TITLE: Alternative Materials and Finishes: Stretching the Creative Process
DATE(S):  August 21 – 27, 2023
DAYS OF WEEK: Monday – Sunday
HOURS: 9:30 am to 4:30 pm
SKILL LEVEL: Intermediate/Advanced

COST: $1155

The heart of this workshop is in the exploration of alternative firings. We will be working and exploring everyday with new firing techniques and processes. Students will bring both greenware and bisqueware to the workshop to fulfill each process. You can visit my website and click on “workshops” to see examples of what you will be learning in the workshop. Below is a list of firings that we will be exploring:

–   Ferric Chloride Saggar Burritos
–   Ferric Chloride Spray Over Clear Crackle
–   Pit Fire over Greenware Terra-Sigillata Base
–   Pit Fire over Bisqueware Terra-Sigillata with Mica Colorants Base
–   Horse Hair/Feather Firing with GreenwareTerra-Sigillata Base
–   Cone 7 Seashell Side-Fire with Matte Crystal Glazes (Oxidation)
–   Cone 11 Side-Fire Shino with Wood Ash (Reduction)

Along with our exploration of alternative firing techniques, we will also spend some time experimenting with alternative materials and surface treatments.  will demonstrate how to make and use the following:

–   Greenware Greek Style Terra Sigillata (Greenware)
–   Greenware Terra-Sigillata with Mason Stain Colorants
–   Bisqueware Terra Sigillata with Mica Colorants
–   Paper Clay with Burnout Legumes
–   Feldspar Inclusions
–   Micaceous Clay

Finally, I will teach you how to clean and finish your pots with the following techniques:
–   Dremel Tool Sanding of Side Fire Wares
–   Wax Sealing of Low Fire Wares
–   Introduction to Gold Leafing Materials and Sizing Demo

**Please note that you will need to purchase an organic vapor mask to participate in the Ferric Chloride processes  (~$45). In preparation for the workshop, you will need approximately 20-40 small to medium pieces at various stages of completion. Please allow enough time for this planning. Detailed information will be provided upon registration.

Submitted by Rocky Lewycky @rockylewycky, http://www.rocksart.com/workshops-2

East Bay Open Studios 2023

Wine Country Teapot Workshop with Miki Shim

Join Miki shim on this one-day teapot workshop and wine tasting in Sonoma Valley, California.

Participants will use hand-building techniques to design and construct functional and decorative teapots.
After the workshop, enjoy wood-fired pizza and wine tasting reception hosted by Quail Run Winery.

Fee: $325, includes all materials for the workshop, morning refreshments, lunch and evening wine tasting reception.
Register: www.mikisr.com

Submitted by Miki Shim

EXHIBITS

Kathy Palli

Kathy Pallie “From the Fire” It is a set of 5 raku fired ceramic leaves each 21”H x 5”L with 2” deep mounting blocks for wall installation.

Emil Yanos

Emil Yanos “Outcropping” Ceramic wall sculpture, Thrown, carved and altered. Ungerglazes, fired to cone 5. 10.75″h x 10.75″w x 3.25″d

Landscape Perspectives

June 2–July 22, 2023
June 9, 5–8pm: Reception and Art Walk
July 14, 5–8pm: Reception and Art Walk

The exhibit, Landscape Perspectives, reimagines and celebrates traditional landscape-based artwork by offering a diverse collection of expressions, approaches, and interpretations. From realism to surrealism, to abstraction, and beyond; viewers will surely enjoy this multi-dimensional experience.

Exhibiting Artists: Chris Adessa, Sheldon Bachus, Barry Beach, Benjamin Benet, Debra Bibel, Jenny Blackburn, John Bucklin, Annette LeMay Burke, Morgan Carhart, Gail Caulfield, Dana Christensen, Patrick Cosgrove, Norma Dimaulo, Janey Fritsche, April Gavin, Wendy Goldberg, Lisa Gonzalves, Gail Gurman, Janet Jacobs, Clementine Keenan, Catherine Lee, Kathleen Lipinski, Liz Mamorsky, Michael Manente, Gary Marsh, Gail Morrison, Kathy Pallie, Cindy Pavlinac, Amrita Singhal, Sue Weil, Rusty Weston, Emil Yanos, June Yokell, Jeffrey Zalles

Juror: Kim Eagles-Smith, owner and director Kim Eagles-Smith Gallery, Mill Valley CA,

Juror Statement:
“In my selections for this exhibit I used the following guidelines:  The artist’s ambition, that they made a serious attempt to create a work of substance. That the artist exhibited a suitable rigor of craftmanship. I was also looking for examples  that began with a creative idea to express the theme of this show and was more than a simple depiction. I also was mindful of selecting as much diversity of media as the limits of selection and works submitted would allow.” —Kim Eagles-Smith

Submitted by Emil Yanos  @emilyanosdesign

NY2CA Gallery Presents “Reciprocity”

A Two Person Exhibition
by Melina Meza
and Melissa Woodburn

June 8 – Aug. 6
Artists’ Reception June 10, 3–6pm
617 – 1st Street, Benicia, CA

Immerse yourself in the beauty of artistic expressions and celebrate the reciprocal relationship between art, nature, and the human spirit. At the reception for artists, experience visual delight, harmonious sounds, and culinary pleasures as they seamlessly come together at this extraordinary exhibition.

Submitted by Melissa Woodburn

Glass Hart Open Studios

Delicious – Works Inspired by Food and Drink

Studio Gallery
June 8th – July 3rd, 2023
Opening Reception:
Sunday, June 11th, 2 – 5 pm
This is always a wonderful show of mostly small works from local artists in all media.  Melissa Woodburn is showing two ceramic sculptures from her persimmon series. To see the online galleries click here.

Submitted by Melissa Woodburn

Delicious - Work Inspired by Food and Drink
Liz Lauter - Majolica

Majolica Garden
Ceramics by Liz Lauter

The San Geronimo Valley Community Center debuts Liz Lauter’s Tree of Life solo ceramics collection. Her recent work features elaborately embellished Arbol de la Vida candelabra forms, wall mounted sculptures and “istoriato” painted platters with narrative themes of Adam & Eve in the Garden of Eden as seen from Eve’s perspective. She uses the traditional Italian majolica technique of terra cotta clay, tin glaze and vibrant hand painted overglaze colors.

Liz’s clay artwork weaves threads of Mexican folk art, Islamic design, and botanical illustration into her own form of expression which is new at the same time familiar. They all meet in her Garden of Eden.

Gallery hours: 12-5 and M-F from 10-5

Artist Reception with Liz Sunday, July 9th from 4-7

Vicki Gunter

Visions in Clay Call for Entries

Entry is open now through June 26, 2023
Exhibition Juror:
Joan Takayama-Ogawa, Professor of Ceramics and Product Design, Otis College of Art & Design, Los Angeles,California

Gallery & Online Exhibition:
August 28 – September 21, 2023
August 31, 5:00-7:00p.m.

Gallery Awards
$800 | $600 | $400
San Joaquin Potters Guild Founders Award ~ $300
Regional Artist Award $800

Entry Fees:
$30 for 3 entries / $45 up to 6 entries
For the complete Prospectus Guidelines and to enter go to:
gallery.deltacollege.edu

– Call for entries
LH Horton Jr. Gallery, San Joaquin Delta College
5151 Pacific Ave.
Stockton, CA

HOW RECENT CHANGES TO OUR ACGA COMMUNICATIONS HELP OUR MEMBERS

Our communications tools now allow members to post their news items directly to the ACGA News Blog, for daily publication. Posts must be admin-approved and may take up to 48 hours to appear in the blog. Incomplete submissions may take longer. The web-based news blog is a living document and posts items in the order they are published. You can scroll through the entire history of the ACGA News here: https://acga.net/acga-news/.

In addition, our monthly ACGA newsletter is emailed to approximately 5500 subscribers. This news is less time-sensitive than more immediate forms of communication such as the news blog and our social media accounts on Instagram and Facebook.

Social media is the most effective and most instantaneous way to reach your audience, provide a platform that can be posted to repeatedly and often. We encourage members to cultivate their own social media accounts on facebook and instagram, to build your own audience and market your wares. We are happy to amplify your message to our followers from time to time when the following conditions are met:

  • Captions must include who, what, where, when details.
  • Posts must relate to something a collector or student can engage with such as a gallery event, an open studio, or an upcoming sale. Posts that lack context will not be reposted.
  • We will not repost items projecting more than 2 weeks in the future.
  • Posts should be tagged @theacga to ensure we can find them

ACGA social media accounts have more than 17,000 followers, so following these guidelines could be valuable to you. News items must be written in grammatically correct form, include all details including names (first and last) of members involved, links to artist websites or social media, studio or gallery locations and hours of operation.

Be aware that we have over 350 members and will strive to be fair and equitable, and to showcase the wide variety of accomplished artists who comprise our group. Publication is not guaranteed, and is not a perquisite of membership. If you have an event with frequent updates or an extended window of time, we expect you to manage your news on your end and we may or may not repost at our discretion.

CLICK HERE FOR SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

ACGA GENERAL MEETING MINUTES – May 8, 2023

Date of Next Meeting: Monday, June 12, 2023, 5:30pm

READ MAY MEETING MINUTES
All ACGA members in good standing are invited to attend our monthly board meeting on zoom. To receive a zoom invitation for the next meeting, email your request to Mari Emori, emori.mari@gmail.com.

LISTINGS

SEE EVENTS CALENDAR:
https://acga.net/events-calendar/
This space is envisioned for future listings of upcoming calendar events. Since we have only just launched the submission process in this mailing, we do not have any current events at this time. Please follow the submission process outlined herein.

Professional Kiln Repair Service
NorCal Kiln Repair- “Professional Bay Area repair service since 2006”
· evaluation & repair: ceramic & glass kilns (gas & electric)
· tutorials: operation, safety, maintenance, custom programming
· evaluation & repair: pottery wheels, pug mills, slab rollers
· ventilation repair & installation / studio safety & setup consultations
· new & used kiln recommendations / appraisals: buying & selling
· ceramics troubleshooting: clays, glaze, construction, firing, etc.
Joseph Kowalczyk (Ko-väl-chick)
kiln & ceramics specialist
510 601-5053 · NorCalKilnRepair@gmail.com
www.norcalkilnrepair.com

ACGA NETWORKING EXPLAINED
Address changes and Membership Changes – Please send all address changes to the membership chair EmilYanos,
acgamembership@gmail.com

.
ACGA’s Website – Check out our website

The home page now features an ‘artist of the month.’ Populate your own page, and update often. To create and edit your profi  le page, go to the For Members menu, choose Member login, and follow the instructions to find and edit your profile.
Need a website password? Email Emil Yanos at
acgamembership@gmail.com

We look forward to hearing from you!

Follow and Like us on FaceBook (@ClayandGlass) and Instagram (@theACGA)
The ACGA News is sent through MailChimp. If your email bounces you or you have been unsubscribed, you can sign up again – contact Communications Lead Ren Lee at: news@acga.net.

Join the ACGA social media group www.facebook.com/groups/ACGASocialMedia

GOOGLE GROUP
Link to the Google group: the-acga@googlegroups.com

To email all members via the ACGA Google group you must be a member. Address your clay/glass-related message to: the-acga@googlegroups.com
There are two ways that you can engage in google groups without a gmail account:
1. Via email only
With a non-gmail email address you can still participate in all of the google group activities by replying to emailsand/or sending an email to the-acga@googlegroups.com to start a new thread. You do not have to create any google accounts to do this. If you’re seeing this email, then you’re in the group and can respond to emails like this one that will be sent to the entire group.

More details on how to create and respond to google group messages in the FAQ!
2. Make a google account
While it’s not necessary to have a google account to participate in the google group, you can create one with your non-gmail email address to get access to the google group site, which just aggregates the ACGA google group conversations in one place that’s easy to review and search.

Board of Directors – 2023
2023 Officers
President: Mari Emori
Vice President: TBD
Secretary: Sally Jackson
Treasurer: April Zilber
Lee Middleman, Jan Schachter, Joe Battiato, Emil Yanos, Trudy Chiddix, Cheryl Costantini,
Chris Johnson, Ren Lee, Susie Rubenstein, Iver Hennig, Sonja Hinrichson, Vicki Gunter, Barbara Prodaniuk

Committee Chairs
Communication – Ren Lee
Exhibitions – Jan Schachter
Festival Liaison – April Zilber
Festival Jury Coordinator – Chris Johnson
Historian – Cuong Ta
Int’l Ambassador – Barbara Brown
Membership Coordinator – Emil Yanos

By |2023-06-26T09:11:22-07:00June 22nd, 2023|Newsletter|Comments Off on Newsletter June 2023

ACGA Board Meeting Minutes, May 2023

ACGA Board Meeting Minutes

Monday, May 8, 2023 via Zoom

Present: Mari Emori (President), April Zilber (Treasurer), Sally Jackson (Secretary), Chris Johnson, Jan Schachter, Trudy Chiddix, Iver Hennig, Sonja Hinrichsen, Barbara Prodaniuk, Joe Battiato, Susie Rubenstein, Ren Lee, Emil Yanos, Vicki Gunter, Cheryl Costantini, Lee Middleman

The meeting commenced at 5:30 p.m.

Welcome (Mari)

Treasurer’s Report (April)

This month’s report is a draft prepared by April while our bookkeeper is away. A final report will be presented to the Board in June. As of April 30, our total assets are $113,967. For the year-to-date through April, we have received $40,739 in income and paid $22,581 in expenses. Festival expenses will continue to mount in the coming weeks. Our 2022 taxes have been filed and fees paid.

Clarify and Vote on April Board Meeting Minutes (Sally)

The April Board Meeting minutes have been modified to address further comments about our discussion on the range of clay and glass work to accept for jurying. The edited minutes have been approved.

Artist-of-the-Month (Emil)

Emil has received feedback from the Board about how to choose our Artist-of-the-Month. After a long discussion, we agreed to call this slot “Member Spotlight” and to require that applicants include information about themselves and their career story in their application. Emil is responsible for reviewing the applications and will reach out to other Board members for input. In coming months he will feature artists who have recently juried in.

Festival eligibility & resident artist programs (Mari, Sally)

Mari was recently in conversation with the director of a resident artist program in ceramics. He asked if he and the group of artists living and working there could have a sales booth at the Clay & Glass Festival. The Board discussed the pros and cons of including this type of well-established program with a changing roster of artists each year. Sally will draft a proposal for Board members to review and comment on.

Festival eligibility and glass artists from a wider community (Chris)

There was further discussion clarifying our policy about stained glass art and modification by heat in both clay and glass. The Board also discussed the possibility that artists who make cannabis paraphernalia might apply for the festival. The Board will check with the Palo Alto Art Center to see if there is a policy addressing this.

The meeting adjourned at 7:08 p.m.

Next Meeting: Monday, June 12, 2023, at 5:30 pm via Zoom.

Board Members will receive the Zoom link with the Agenda.

By |2023-06-07T17:45:06-07:00June 7th, 2023|ACGA News, Board Meeting|Comments Off on ACGA Board Meeting Minutes, May 2023

Landscape Perspectives

June 2–July 22, 2023
June 9, 5–8pm: Reception and Art Walk
July 14, 5–8pm: Reception and Art Walk

The exhibit, Landscape Perspectives, reimagines and celebrates traditional landscape-based artwork by offering a diverse collection of expressions, approaches, and interpretations. From realism to surrealism, to abstraction, and beyond; viewers will surely enjoy this multi-dimensional experience.

Exhibiting ArtistsChris Adessa, Sheldon Bachus, Barry Beach, Benjamin Benet, Debra Bibel, Jenny Blackburn, John Bucklin, Annette LeMay Burke, Morgan Carhart, Gail Caulfield, Dana Christensen, Patrick Cosgrove, Norma Dimaulo, Janey Fritsche, April Gavin, Wendy Goldberg, Lisa Gonzalves, Gail Gurman, Janet Jacobs, Clementine Keenan, Catherine LEE, Kathleen Lipinski, Liz Mamorsky, Michael Manente, Gary Marsh, Gail Morrison, Kathy Pallie, Cindy Pavlinac, Amrita Singhal, Sue Weil, Rusty Weston, Emil Yanos, June Yokell, Jeffrey Zalles

Juror: Kim Eagles-Smith, owner and director Kim Eagles-Smith Gallery, Mill Valley CA, www.kesfineart.com

Juror Statement:
“In my selections for this exhibit I used the following guidelines:  The artist’s ambition, that they made a serious attempt to create a work of substance. That the artist exhibited a suitable rigor of craftmanship.

I was also looking for examples  that began with a creative idea to express the theme of this show and was more than a simple depiction. I also was mindful of selecting as much diversity of media as the limits of selection and works submitted would allow.”

Kim Eagles-Smith

Captions:
Kathy Pallie  “From the Fire”  It is a set of 5 raku fired ceramic leaves each 21”H x 5”L with 2” deep mounting blocks for wall installation.
Emil Yanos  “Outcropping”  Ceramic wall sculpture, Thrown, carved and altered.  Ungerglazes, fired to cone 5.  10.75″h x 10.75″w x 3.25″d

By |2023-06-07T17:45:31-07:00June 7th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on Landscape Perspectives

NY2CA Gallery Presents “Reciprocity”

A Two Person Exhibition by Melina Meza and Melissa Woodburn

June 8 – Aug. 6
Artists’ Reception   June 10,  3–6pm
617 – 1st Street,  Benicia,  CA

Immerse yourself in the beauty of artistic expressions and celebrate the reciprocal relationship between art, nature, and the human spirit. At the reception for artists, experience visual delight, harmonious sounds, and culinary pleasures as they seamlessly come together at this extraordinary exhibition.
By |2023-06-07T17:46:06-07:00June 7th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on NY2CA Gallery Presents “Reciprocity”

Jim Melchert  | Works of Resonance 

Article by Nancy M Servis 

Reprinted from Ceramics: Art and Perception No 100, 2015, with permission of the author. 

 

In the spoken work performance, 100 Statements About Myself, 1992/2013, at Southern Exposure Gallery in the Mission District of San Francisco, California, US Jim Melchert calmly stood before a restless urban crowd restating 50 phrases written two decades ago followed by 50 contemporary statements. His vocal. Cadence and intonations infused the cavernous room with warmth, humour and surprise. As one might expect, his comments touched upon observations on art and living a creative life. But others such as, "Most people could use some good news," from 2013, hinted at a humanitarian perspective gained over the course of time. 

 

This performance was part of the exhibition, The Long Conversation, featuring select multigernerational artists from throughout the San Francisco Bay Area who were exhibiting, performing and creating conceptual work. It was also one of a number of exhibitions in which Melchert and his work were recently featured, illustrating his enduring and productive career. His inclusion in. Many exhibits such as Paul Kotula Projects in Ferndale, Michigan; Gallery Paule Anglim in San Francisco; Scores for a Room: David Haxton and Jim Melchert at the Worth Ryder Art Gallery at University of California, Berkeley; Lively Experiment during NCECA's 2015 conference in Providence, Rhode Island, US; and recently, the art commission, Riven/River, 2013 for the San Francisco Airport Museum, sharpen anew the focus on a conceptually driven artist whose creative output is often, but not always, associated with the material of clay. 

The Southern Exposure reading illustrates an essence in Melchert's work, spawned decades ago by the ideas presented in Raymond Queneau's book, Exersises de Style, in which, as the artist notes, "he related the same anecdote over and over, but each time in a different literary style. I seem to have a passion for multiplicity."1 This idea prompted Melchert to devise his 1970 lowercase a series where he placed 21 a's throughout the main gallery of the San Francisco Art Institute. Some were sculptural, made of varying materials while others were two-dimensionally flat such as a word on paper. As both a single letter and a word, the multiple uses of 'a' challenged art and exhibition mores of the time, as the conceptual messaging that unfolded suited the artist's intent. 

A slightly earlier piece in Melchert's sculptural explorations is Photo Negative with Metal Ashtray, 1968. It captures the artist's early probing of ideas through materiality and starts to pave the way for both his time-based work and his celebrated expansive planes of tile. This curious serial piece is a three-dimensional representation of a photographic negative. It is only complete as a work of art when someone's hand enters the scene to approach the ashtray while trailing cigarette smoke. 

The duality often present in Melchert's body of work is better understood when considering his participation in two landmark and distinctly different Bay Area shows during the provocative 1960s: The Slant-Step Show in 1965 which revolved around the painter, William T Wiley and his then University of California, Davis graduate student, Bruce Nauman, exploring the confounding mystery regarding a small linoleum-covered slanted chair spawning artistic speculation to its intended use; and the 1967 Funk show curated by Peter Selz at the University of California, Berkeley where the controversial wave of sculptural work was shown by 26 artists, including Robert Arneson, Joan Brown, Bruce Conner, Roy De Forest, and Manuel Neri. Both exhibitions were bold harbingers of creative societal thought that stimulated many artists not artistically bound by the use of any one specific material. Melchert successfully and simultaneously straddled both realms.  

Melchert's investigation of existential ideas was poignantly illustrated in 1972 with the performance piece Changes: A performance with drying Slip, a well-known landmark event in the annals of conceptual and ceramics history, undertaken during a visit to Amsterdam and Documenta 5 in Kassel, Germany. Melchert recalls this original event where 10 people dipped their heads in slip and then were guided to sit on either side of the temperature-variant room. He recalls, "The studio in Amsterdam was large. I placed the two benches perhaps eight feet apart in more or less the center of it. Between them I had the blocks of ice at one end and the charcoal fire at the other."2 The respective rate of drying slip encasing each individual's head defined their interior sound scape of breathing, heartbeat and even nervous system pulsations. Consequently, participants were shifted out of the realm of an artist acting on a medium into an arena where the medium asserted control.3 This communal performance and his 1975 one-person show, Points of View, Slide Projection Installations at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art permanently anchored Melchert in the realm of conceptually driven engagement.  

At first, these events seem unrelated to Melchert's current large-scale tile-based artwork. While he does not describe himself solely as a ceramic artist, the category fits most of his work. Through conversation, however, it becomes clear that his 20 years engagement with large, fractured tiles (each tile measuring 18 x 18 in) that are glazed and realigned achieving a constellation-like presence, is rooted in his lifelong meditation of ideas that often intermingle avant-garde music with surrealism and even physics. 

Born in 1930 and raised in Ohio, Melchert circuitously made his way to Northern California to work with the unconventional Peter Voulkos, with whom he first briefly studied in 1957 during a summer session at the University of Montana, Missoula. Leah Balsham, an instructor at the Chicago Art institute where Melchert was pursuing his first graduate degree in painting, encouraged this contact. She encountered Voulkos and the unapologetic use of large amounts of clay in the early 1950s at the recently formed Archie Bray foundation for the Ceramic Arts (then known as Pottery, Inc at the Western Brick Manufacturing Company) on the outskirts of Helena, Montana. Balsham's two introductory classes enabled Melchert to complete his graduate studies in three quarters. In 1957 he was hired to teach art at Carthage College, Illinois (now in Kenosha, Wisconsin). As sole art instructor for the school, he taught all the course offerings including ceramics. "Having had nothing more than an introduction to it," he stated, "I would work with clay the evening before class to get some ideas to present to the students. I began enjoying those sessions. That is when I decided to spend the following summer investigating clay."4 He wrote Balsam inquiring about the Bray, which she praised yet directed him toward Voulkos' course in Missoula instead.  

As for many Bay Area artists, Peter Voulkos served as a magnetic draw. And for Melchert, the early association in Montana lured him to UC Berkeley (Cal) where he undertook a second graduate degree with Voulkos in the Department of Decorative Arts. There, he and Sandra Johnstone were Voulkos' first and only registered graduate students in ceramics. Soon thereafter, many artists came to Cal either as students or auditors to be a part of the unfolding dynamic scene at Berkeley's ceramic Pot Shop. John Mason was one of many artists Melchert met during this time; and Melchert fondly recalls driving to Los Angeles in 1959 with Voulkos to connect with several of Voulkos' friends and fellow artists. Mason, along with many other artists such as Michael Frimkess and Henry Takemoto were also periodic auditors at the UC Berkeley program working alongside enrolled students such as Kazuye Suyematsu. These early associations set the groundwork for the lifelong friendship Melchert and Mason still share. Their enduring artistic relationship also illustrates the creative fluidity that exists between Northern and Southern California. Although the San Francisco Bay Area and greater Los Angeles are 400 miles apart, the channels of ceramics engagement were direct. 

Melchert also was an influential teacher at the Bay Area universities: San Francisco Art Institute 1961-1965 (ceramics) and University of California, Berkeley (sculpture) from 1965 until 1992, and is now Professor Emeritus in the Department of Art Practice. He led the Visual Arts Program at the National Endowment for the Arts, Washington, DC (1977-1981) and was Director of the American Academy in Rome (1984-1988). Such advocation took seed early in Melchert's life. Upon graduation from Princeton University in 1952 with an AB in art history, he travelled to Japan to teach English for four years.5 While in Japan, Melchert met his wife, Mary Ann, and started their family that grew to three children. These guideposts create a framework in which Melchert's artistic productivity is considered. 

A complexity of cultural forces also underlies the essence of Jim Melchert's lifelong work. Raised in a musical home and adept at piano and choral singing, Melchert's creative thinking reflexively aligns with experiments in music, especially John Cage, the development of indetermination and the role of chance guiding artistic direction. Musician and composer, David Tudor, whom Melchert admired for several years and then met while in Rome, performed many of Cage's works.6 Melchert's dept of thought and ongoing engagement with subliminal tenets find realization in a series of recent works collectively titled, Piano Scores for David Tudor, 2011-2013, illustrating both his kinship with indeterminate music and the incorporation of chance to dictate surface design. This series illustrates the artist's method of spinning a short measuring stick-like tool that lands on the porcelain tile to indicate where the glazed bands of color are applied. Once fired, he then conjoins his reassembled tiles to create visual resonances mounted on the wall. Melchert then draws with graphite on some of his large wall works, intentionally departing from traditional ceramics practice since graphite vanishes when fired. Each square section is an opportunity to further articulate his ideas. For the artist, graphite renderings on tile succeed in a way that drawings on paper cannot.  

Melchert's use of chance for breaking tile is not an uninformed act. Similar to how potters perceive the firing results of an anagama kiln, Melchert experientially intuits the breaking of tile. The sidewalk just outside his studio is where he drops and cracks commercial tiles knowing which abruption will cause a spider crack, radiating fan, or elegant arc. This act exposes the clay's interiority and, for the artist, respects the path of energy. Contextually, the artist often describes his conversation with a physicist regarding the definition of a crack and that it is forged along a weak alignment of molecules. "The point is" he explains, "that on one hand you have fired clay which is a mass and on the other, energy rushing through it separating sections where the bond between molecules is weak."7 This material vulnerability suited his desire to identify and explore the inherent vice of ceramics. "But surely in clay," the artist pondered, "there was a place for the concept that was other than structural."8 Melchert's tiles attest to this idea. It is fitting, then that avant-garde Bay Area composer, Greg Moore, visited the artist in his studio to record Melchert's shattering process which he then recalibrated into a sound performance.9  

This layered approach enters the realm of creative phenomena and is where Melcher's tile murals insightfully succeed. Wayne Higby discusses the idea of creative phenomena in his curatorial essay "Material Matters: Art and Phenomena" for the 2010 Scripps College 66th Ceramic Annual. "The dynamics of perception," he begins, "are central to both the experience of art and to the critical theory that examines the experience of art." … "I have become convinced that we initially experience works of art through our senses in response to phenomena.10 He featured 14 artists whose work attained an insightful depiction of materiality deeply informed by process that bridled phenomena accelerating the final work. Melchert, whose pursuit of conceptual ideas led him in and out of the use of clay as an artistic medium for many years, similarly has been investigating this complex balance. "What I had formerly thought of only as a flaw I could now regard as a positive feature worth investigating….Opening a tile is like entering a hidden place. There are seemingly endless ways of interacting with what you encounter, each of which can lead to a discrete body of work."11 During his active 60-year career he has made sculpture, film-based conceptualizations, drawing, performance, and commanding wall-mounted tile murals creating a life-long collection expressing a varied dialogue of universal thoughts and ideas. 

Jim Melchert's tile panels and large murals are the most appropriate forum for his complex artistic pursuit. Pieces such as Reassure, 2008 illustrate one aspect of his approach. He draws upon ideas that, after many years of inquiry and experimentation, summon poetics in his work. The graceful arc of a cracked, often sharply edged line is carefully echoed through repetitions of bands of glaze that follow the crack's trajectory. Merged with sibling tiles to create pairs, triptychs or 60×40 inch painting-size works, Melchert's ensembles attain visual and perceptual effect. They emerge from thoughtful reformations of abrupt occurrences where studied embellishments unfold into eloquent imperfections. Further, his fascination with patterned light and light's transparent and reflective capacities, synchronize with his conceptualizations while utilizing the realm of clay. Melchert's preoccupation with tile's ability to react to light emerged while visiting mosques in the Middle East during the 1980s. His discussions of those observations, of seeing the changing light reflect off large architectural forms by way of small, angled tiles, assist our understanding of his focus. His recent 2014 trip to Iran, where he visited more ancient architectural sites, is evidence of his enduring consideration of the ethereal capacity of tile. 

Riven/River, 2013 is Melchert's latest work resulting from his 20 year inquiry into the structural, artistic and poetic properties of tile murals. The title reinforces the artist's act of fracturing with the idea of energy release and flow. Here energy, like water, is seen with select blue glazing, takes the path of least resistance. With its saturated use of red on gray tile, visible from great distances often negotiated in airports, the work is charged by intense patterning in the two large pulsating sections. Fundamental to this energised piece is his willingness to engage chance in its initial tile breakage. The sensitive reassembly of shards into bold swaths of vibrating color distance the work from its ceramic reality, positioning it in the realm of eloquently depicted ideas. While process is not the main consideration for his work, it fosters our understanding of his transcendent result. Jim Melchert's tile murals depict his conceptual message in the realm of ceramics. They also direct our thinking toward a resonate aesthetic that attains what Higby concludes is "phenomena imbedded in the never-ending richness of material and process."12 

 

Endnotes 

  1. "James Melchert: Conversations on Time, Chance and Creative Intelligence:, http://0vnweb.hwilsonweb.com.library.cca.edu/hww/results/results/_single_fulltext.jhtml;jsessionid=D. This article first appeared in the publication, Studio Potter, No. 25, pp 43-59, June 1997. 
  1. Email from the artist, January 1, 2015. 
  1. 3. See: Vimeo.com/108589844 for the original b/w filmed performance. 
  1. Op cit, email. 
  1. While at Princeton, Jim Melchert met another student, Stephen De Staebler, two years younger, who was pursuing a degree in religion. 
  1. Melchert was introduced to the musical scores of John Cage by Peter Voulkos in 1959/1960. Voulkos acquired them while at Black Mountain College, North Carolina, in exchange for some wares. "You look at these scores and it is almost as if somebody had written a letter. They have nothing to do with notation. And he (Voulkos) said that David Tudor could play these. He remarked that David Tudor could play the telephone directory." Melchert, Jim. Interview by author. 14 November 2013. 
  1. Op cit, email. 
  1. Op cit, interview. 
  1. Ibid. 
  1. Higby, Wayne. "Material Matters: Art and Phenomena." in 2010 Scripps College 66th Ceramic Annual. Exh. Cat., Claremont, California: Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery, Scripps College, 2010, p 9. 
  1. Melchert, Jim. "Breaking and Entering." In Jim Melchert: Breaking and Entering. San Francisco, California: Gallery Paule Anglim, 2008, p 3. 
  1. In discussing the idea of art and phenomena, Higby cites the book Aesthetics and Appearing by Martin Seel, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Giessen, Germany as an influence. Op cit p 10. 

Nancy M Servis is an essayist, curator and ceramiccs historian who resides in Northern California, US. She was the 2014 Jentel Critic at the ARchie Bray Foundation, Montana, completing her residency aththe Jentel Foundation in Banner, Wyoming. As Research Fellow at the American Museum of Ceramic Art in Pomona, California, Servis is continuing her oral history interviews with ceramics artists and practitioners in preparation for her upcoming book on ceramics in Northern California.  

By |2023-06-05T15:41:24-07:00June 5th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on Jim Melchert  | Works of Resonance 

12-Day Korean Ceramics Tour hosted by Miki Shim

A self-guided travel to Korea visiting ceramics friends got me thinking I should share my experience with other ceramics enthusiasts, professionals and friends. Hope you can join me in the all-inclusive tour in South Korea visiting ceramics related sights, and to earn from local masters in their craft. Just meet me in Seoul, I’ll take care of the rest for the duration of the tour.

Fee: $3500, includes meals, lodging and travel fees. PLUS:

  • Group exhibition with local artists group in Yeoju
  • 1-day workshop with @moondobang, master potter
  • 5-day wood fire workshop with @youngtaek_shin, Tea Master and kiln builder
  • 1-day Naked Raku workshop with @young.soo.kim, Naked Raku artist and Raku kiln builder
  • Seoul sights
  • Busan sights
  • Icheon Ceramics Village
By |2023-05-29T08:48:54-07:00May 29th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on 12-Day Korean Ceramics Tour hosted by Miki Shim

Newsletter May 2023

ACGA Newsletter May 2023

30th ANNUAL ACGA CLAY & GLASS FESTIVAL SET FOR JULY 15 – 16

The prestigious ACGA Clay & Glass Festival in Palo Alto celebrates 30 years this year! Scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, July 15 and 16, at the Palo Alto Art Center, 1313 Newell Road, this year promises to be an awesome art experience for all.

For two days, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., California’s top clay and glass artists will offer their finest work for purchase. More than 100 juried artists are participating. There will also be live demos, food and drink. Admission is free, and valet parking is available.

From functional to fine art, the beloved ACGA Clay & Glass Festival has it all. ACGA artists are still welcome to participate by contacting Festival Producer Annie Hermes of Messenger Events at annie@messengerevents.com.

We look forward to seeing you July 15 and 16!

30th Annual ACGA Clay & Glass Festival July 15 - 16

FIRST TIME FESTIVAL EXHIBITORS – SNEAK PEEK!

Glenn Evans - 2023 ACGA Clay & Glass Festival

GLENN EVANS

I am drawn by the juxtaposition of precise geometric forms with natural, organic ones. When I look at the Golden Gate Bridge I see the triangles, rectangles and parabolas that create its strength, resilience, and stability. Simultaneously, I see the sparkle, reflections, shadows, and movement of the environs that no human designed yet are intrinsic to its beauty and to my aesthetic experience. I am guided by the same principles in creating fused glass – precisely executed geometric forms integrated with organic shapes and color.

Over the last year or so I have been particularly fascinated by the transformation of precise geometric arrangements into intricate organic patterns using drop rings of various sizes. For this submission I have focused on a recent series which uses a variety of pattern-bar-like components as the starting point for each piece. This approach demands exactitude in the assembly and cold work, yet the final result depends equally on the serendipity that happens in the unseen red glow of the kiln.

Glenn Evans

Gabriela Montufar - student ACGA

RACHEL COX

Growing up in an artistic family in Atlanta, Georgia, I always had art supplies at hand and was encouraged to play and experiment. When I settled in San Francisco, California as a young adult, I discovered my love of ceramics at City College of San Francisco. I studied the medium independently while traveling in Mexico and Central America, and later earned an MFA in Applied Craft and Design from Pacific Northwest College of Art / Oregon College of Art and Craft. I also hold a BA in Sociology from Brandeis University.

Spiritual traditions of various cultures and archetypal symbols have long interested me. Over the years, I’ve integrated those visual elements in my art while applying contemporary designs and patterns. I have exhibited art in San Francisco, Pacifica, Oakland, Portland, and Seattle. After a long hiatus from exhibiting while working in academia, I reemerged in several art shows in 2022. I make my work at a community ceramics studio and at my kitchen table in San Francisco.

Rachel Cox

Kevin Scheer - 2023 ACGA CLay & Glass Festival

KEVIN SCHEER

Although my strongest passion lies in the ceramic arts, I have spent over 30 years in a variety of disciplines ranging from photography and jewelry, to studying acoustic guitar and publishing photo-realistic art. I feel that my diverse interests have provided me with a broader understanding of how we all interact with and truly need art in our daily lives to nourish ourselves.

Having taken ceramic courses at a variety of facilities and having my own studio, I consider myself mostly self-taught. I do enjoy studying work from students of the Leach/Hamada tradition and have currently been influenced by those who studied under these two great craftsmen. I believe I am continually on my journey of working toward my own aesthetic and individual style, further defining myself as a unique ceramic artist.

Kevin Scheer

Moran Nhel - 2023 ACGA CLay & Glass Festival

MORAN NHEL

Moran was born in Cambodia, near the border of Vietnam.  Cambodian art & culture, Angkor Wat, and the natural tropical landscapes (forests, rivers & the great lake Tonle Sap) influenced his artistic mind.  As a boy, he entertained himself by making figures of animals & people from clay found in the riverbanks.  As the Vietnam War came to an end, the Cambodian Genocide by the Khmer Rouge began.  Moran was separated from his family as a teen during the brutal Khmer Rouge regime. In 1975 he escaped and made his way to a refugee camp in Thailand. A year later, he arrived in San Bernardino, California as part of a US refugee program.  After learning English and earning his GED, Moran started college at Cal State San Bernardino in 1978.  In 1980, he studied abroad for a semester at the University of Paris.  The art and culture in France changed his outlook and his major.  During college Moran showed his work in Southern California art festivals such as Burbank – 1985, La Quinta – 1985, & Beverly Hills – 1986.  Moran earned a Dual Bachelor’s Degree in French and Fine Arts, with an emphasis in glass sculpture at Cal State University, San Bernardino in 1986.  Over the years, his style has changed from sculpting a single subject in one material – stone, bronze, glass or ceramics; to incorporating a mixture of those media in order to create a complete artistic idea.  Currently, Moran is focusing on fused glass art.

Moran Nhel

MEMBER NEWS

ACGA Visits Scott Jennings
MoonDoBang 2023 USA Tour

Moments in Time and Space

Ceramics by Claudia Tarantino, Bill Heiderich and Daniel Alejandro Trejo

April 14 – June 12, 2023  

Pence Gallery, 212 D Street, Davis, CA

https://pencegallery.org/exhibitions/current-exhibits/

My trompe l’oeil sculpture is narrative still life in porcelain.

Time is the thread in my work. — Claudia Tarantino

“I have described my work as “moments in time, past and present,” so it was fitting to be invited by Natalie Nelson, Director of The Pence Gallery in Davis, CA, to be in an exhibit entitled Moments in Time and Space. She contacted me more than a year and a half ago and invited me to exhibit in April of 2023. The show would run for 2 months. Having followed my work for a while, Natalie said she felt the show need not be limited to the most recent work. Both the continuity and change in my work over the years fit the theme of the exhibit. There are twelve sculptures in this exhibit, spanning 12 years.

“When we were finally able to schedule a studio visit, Natalie and I hit it off immediately. She loved the new work, still in process, which is larger in scale than previous pieces. “THERE WAS A TIME” which deals with the patina of time on objects past their usefulness, possibly long forgotten, and stored away, is my most recent sculpture.

“MOMENTS IN TIME” brings together memorabilia from four generations of my family, from my Italian immigrant great grandparents and grandparents to my sister and me as children saying our prayers.

“Natalie also gravitated to several favorite earlier sculptures, which captured moments as I remembered them. “FAVORITE RECIPES” 2011 pays homage to my paternal grandmother and replicates her recipe box and handwriting. Another, “COLLECTIONS” also from 2011, shows the treasures of a little girl, me, collected and saved through the years. “WORKING WOMEN,” from 2019 holds a photo of my maternal grandmother and fellow women workers circa 1923.

“As I move up in years and contend with one day becoming a memory myself, I hope that the sculptures I have created will convey the memories they reference, and the universal memories that all people share in similar and disparate ways.

“It was a pleasure to show with Bill Heiderich and Daniel Alejandro Trejo, whose very different approaches to objects in time and space were a compliment to mine.

Claudia Tarantino grew up in San Francisco and received her BA in Art from Dominican College of San Rafael, CA. She has been working in clay ever since, as a production potter for the first 10 years and thereafter as a sculptor, working exclusively in porcelain. A two-time recipient of Marin Arts Council Individual Artist Grants, her work is exhibited nationally and her sculptures are in many private collections and museums. Images and reviews of Claudia’s work have been published in numerous books and magazines.  Claudia lives in San Anselmo, CA with her husband, artist Bill Abright. They share a spacious studio built under their hillside home. They have two adult sons, Oben Abright and Guston Abright, both artists.

Submitted by Claudia Tarantino @claudiatarantinoart

Mari Emori ACGA

Mari Emori “Celestial” – 19″H x 13″W x9″D – 2022

Mari Emori Awarded 1st Place

Mari was awarded 1st placefor her sculpture “Celestial” in OFF CENTER, An International Ceramic Art Competition, by juror Garth Johnson, Paul Phillips and Sharon Sullivan Curator of Ceramics at the Everson Museum of Art in Syracuse, New York.

“My “Drop Series” is deeply inspired by nature, both its beauty and the destructive power of its forces, as a single drop of water signifies life and the environment. I create pieces that reflect my connection to the natural world. When I’m not in the studio, I love to spend time in nature, hiking and wandering, always taking in new impressions that find their way into my work.

“Most recently, I have been looking toward the night sky, inspired by a renewed interest in space exploration. I have expanded my “Drop Series” and created variations representing our universe and its beauty. “Celestial” represents the vastness of our universe, inspired by our galaxy. Wispy arms of stars reach out amidst a sea of emptiness while a mass of heavenly bodies cluster around a center that could be a black hole or a portal to the unknown.”

OFF CENTER: April 8 – May 20, 2023

www.bluelinearts.org/off-center-2023

Blue Line Arts: 405 Vernon St #100, Roseville, CA 95678  gallery@bluelinearts.org

Submitted by Mari Emori  @emoriceramics

Persona – Deborah Bridges

Persona - Deborah Bridges

Second Saturday Art Walks May 13, open through 8pm and online at

https://brumfieldgallery.com/show/brumfield-gallery-deborah-bridges

‘Persona’ is an ongoing series of works by Deborah Bridges. The exploration of an idea in a piece is central to Deborah’s art. She works in a series until the idea is exhausted within the form.  This current body of work, “Persona”,  began in 2018. When asked what is it that she is expressing in these serious faces with masks and puppet-like bodies?  She says,  “I love the incongruity of them. I love the complicated and mysterious humanity of them.  My figures are grappling with the full range of human experience, the dark as well as the light. The face paint points to the masks we wear as we try to hold on to the stories of our apparent separate selfhood, our personas.”

Reposted from https://brumfieldgallery.com/show/brumfield-gallery-deborah-bridges

Meet Your Board Member: Ren Lee

Boardmember Emil Yanos

I’ve been a working artist all my life, starting as a graphic artist, moving through years of freelancing and then corporate creative directing and then as an entrepreneur. It took a divorce to get me into clay: when a friend suggested pounding clay would be good therapy, I jumped at the opportunity and found my true calling in a handbuilding class at Sunset Canyon Pottery just outside of Austin Texas. I made my first ‘juju doll’ there, probably with voodoo in mind, but these gestural clay figures have become an ongoing source of inspiration in my practice, evoking the spirit of unseen but felt presences.

My background reads like an epic journey novel or the diaries of Lewis and Clark: exploring uncharted possibilities and doubling back to investigate another tack. I started college as a wildlife science major, thinking how fun it would be to play with furry critters all day and was dismayed to learn it was more about figuring out how many you could “harvest” per year, a prospect that I found unbearable. I switched to biology spent time studying bats in the field but my near total lack of pigment made the prospect of spending lots of time outdoors untenable unless I wanted to specialize in nocturnal species. Since I turn into a pumpkin myself when the sun goes down, I needed to rethink my goals, but if I ever go on Jeopardy I have the Animalia category covered.

When one of my elective art professors suggested I apply for the MFA program at Utah State University, I felt like I was in my own element at last, and was lucky enough to be hired as a junior graphic designer in Los Angeles back in the day, working for some very good design houses including the Weller Institute, Saul Bass/Herb Yager, and Advertising Designers. Those jobs led to some teaching gigs in Arizona, Utah, and Texas. I continued to freelance until I found myself sucked into the vortex of corporate communications where I spent 13 years as a Creative Director promoting deli sandwiches and when I finally got out of that I wanted nothing more than to balance my karma.

Fast forward to the present day: I work out of Clay Hand Studios @clayhandstudios in Fresno where the people are great and the winter weather is lovely (summer not so much), and it turns out that the San Joaquin Valley is a perfect place to practice art. I’m in the studio almost every day, working on my own projects or teaching handbuilding classes to avid learners. I still make juju figures a/k/a spirit dolls, but have expanded my repertoire to include sentient animals in objective and functional sculpture, mythical presences and the occasional functional piece. I look forward every year to the ACGA Clay and Glass Festival in Palo Alto and spending time with family in the area. I love being on the ACGA board’s Communications Team, editing the newsletter, and am excited about things to come. I’m also active with the San Joaquin Clay and Glass association @sanjoaquinclayandglass on Instagram.

If you have a story to tell, please send it to me or publish it on ACGA News or Events

Events Calendar – https://acga.net/submit-an-event-to-the-acga-calendar/

News Stories –  https://acga.net/submit-a-post-to-acga-news/

Submitted by Ren Lee, ACGA Communications Team @renlee000@gmail.com, @renleestudio

WORKSHOPS

Press Mold and Paper Clay Techniques Workshop

PRESS-MOLD & PAPER CLAY TECHNIQUES WORKSHOP @ LANEY COLLEGE!!

Saturday June 10th, 10am -4pm

Non Student Rate $70 Student Rate $50

Register at this address: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/press-mold-and-paper-clay-technique-with-wesley-wright-and-malia-landis-tickets-607701450397

Join Wes and Malia for a collaborative workshop with hands on demonstrations! The workshop will begin with lectures discussing the broader applications of their process, followed by concurrent demonstrations.

Wesley will use larger press molds to construct an animal totem while Malia will construct flower and plant forms in paper clay to be added to the totem toward the end of the demonstration.

Attendees will have the opportunity to participate in the hands on demonstration and work alongside each artist. Use of press molds, ceramic sculpting techniques and how to approach working with paper clay will all be covered…. plus so much more!

Join us for the fun.

Malia Landis @malialandis, malialandis.com

Wesley Wright  @wesleytwrightart, wesleytwright.com

Reposted from Wesley Wright Instagram

Chris Johnson Glass Mother's Day Workshop

Submitted by Chris Johnson chris@chrisjohnsonglass.com, @chrisjohnsonglass

Alternative Materials and Finishes - Rocky Lewycky

ALTERNATIVE MATERIALS AND FINISHES:

STRETCHING THE CREATIVE PROCESS

WORKSHOP WITH ROCKY LEWYCKY

LOCATION: Mendocino Art Center

INSTRUCTOR: Rocky Lewycky
CLASS TITLE: Alternative Materials and Finishes: Stretching the Creative Process
DATE(S):  August 21 – 27, 2023
DAYS OF WEEK: Monday – Sunday
HOURS: 9:30 am to 4:30 pm
SKILL LEVEL: Intermediate/Advanced

COST: $1155

The heart of this workshop is in the exploration of alternative firings. We will be working and exploring everyday with new firing techniques and processes. Students will bring both greenware and bisqueware to the workshop to fulfill each process. You can visit my website and click on “workshops” to see examples of what you will be learning in the workshop. Below is a list of firings that we will be exploring:

–   Ferric Chloride Saggar Burritos
–   Ferric Chloride Spray Over Clear Crackle
–   Pit Fire over Greenware Terra-Sigillata Base
–   Pit Fire over Bisqueware Terra-Sigillata with Mica Colorants Base
–   Horse Hair/Feather Firing with GreenwareTerra-Sigillata Base
–   Cone 7 Seashell Side-Fire with Matte Crystal Glazes (Oxidation)
–   Cone 11 Side-Fire Shino with Wood Ash (Reduction)

Along with our exploration of alternative firing techniques, we will also spend some time experimenting with alternative materials and surface treatments.  will demonstrate how to make and use the following:

–   Greenware Greek Style Terra Sigillata (Greenware)
–   Greenware Terra-Sigillata with Mason Stain Colorants
–   Bisqueware Terra Sigillata with Mica Colorants
–   Paper Clay with Burnout Legumes
–   Feldspar Inclusions
–   Micaceous Clay

Finally, I will teach you how to clean and finish your pots with the following techniques:
–   Dremel Tool Sanding of Side Fire Wares
–   Wax Sealing of Low Fire Wares
–   Introduction to Gold Leafing Materials and Sizing Demo

**Please note that you will need to purchase an organic vapor mask to participate in the Ferric Chloride processes  (~$45). In preparation for the workshop, you will need approximately 20-40 small to medium pieces at various stages of completion. Please allow enough time for this planning. Detailed information will be provided upon registration.

Mendocino Art Center Website

https://www.mendocinoartcenter.org/classes-1/alternative-materials-and-finishes-stretching-the-creative-process

Rocky Lewycky Website

http://www.rocksart.com/workshops-2

Submitted by Rocky Lewycky @rockylewycky

EXHIBITS

PAINTERLY

 

Painterly – characterized by qualities of color, stroke, or texture perceived as distinctive to the art of painting, especially the rendering of forms and images in terms of color or tonal relations rather than of contour or line.

This show features works by Josie Jurczenia @josiejurczeniaclay, David Swenson, Lisa Orr, Masayuki Miyajima, Ron Meyers, Bede Clarke, Hayne Bayless, and more.

Reposted from Schaller Gallery

Painterly - Schaller Gallery

EAST BAY OPEN STUDIOS

 

May 13+14, May 20+21,
11 am – 5 pm


East Bay Open Studios is almost here! Over 185 artists across the East Bay will open their studios to the public so you can discover art where it happens
.

EBOS is an opportunity to connect to the fabulous artists who live in your cities and neighborhoods. Meet artists, see or purchase their artwork, and build community. The event is free and family-friendly.

EBOS is self-guided and you can visit as many studios as you want. You can use the map on our website to locate studios or download Vibemap to participate in a Treasure Hunt and win prizes. If you need help getting oriented, start at one of our Community Hubs or RSVP to our Opening Celebration and Exhibition at Uptown Station on Friday, May 12. We can’t wait to see you there!

East Bay Open Studios

https://eastbayopenstudios.com

@eastbayopenartstudios

East Bay Open Studios is a program of Oakland Art Murmur www.oaklandartmurmur.org

Deb Sullivan (clay)

3234 Fernside Boulevard, Alameda

www.debsullivanpottery.com

Itsuko Zenitani (clay)

731 Jones Street, Berkeley

www.berkeleypotters.com/artist/itsuko-zenitani

Mari Emori (clay)

731 Jones Street, Berkeley

www.berkeleypotters.com/artist/mari-emori

Javier Perez (clay)

8001 Terrace Drive, El Cerrito

www.Javierperezstudio.com

Vivien Hart (glass)

894 Dewing Avenue, Lafayette

www.glasshart.com

Submitted by Mari Emori  @emoriceramics

East Bay Open Studios 2023
East Bay Open Studios 2023
East Bay Open Studios 2023

GLASS HART OPEN STUDIOS

 

Glass Hart Open Studios

Glass Hart Studio opens its doors to visitors during the 2nd weekend of east bay open studios,
May 20-21, 2023, Sat. & Sun. 11-5pm.
Glass Hart Studio is a working kiln-forming glass studio based near downtown Lafayette. You can find glass wall art, sculptural bowls and small gifts. Light refreshments will be served. A convenient 10 minute walk from Lafayette bart. You can also find street parking nearby.

Look forward to seeing you then!

Submitted by Vivien Hart

Website: www.glasshart.com

IG: @vivienhart

San Joaquin Clay & Glass Association Spring Festival
San Joaquin Clay & Glass Association Spring Festival
San Joaquin Clay & Glass Association Spring Festival

SAN JOAQUIN CLAY & GLASS ASSOCIATION SPRING FESTIVAL

The San Joaquin Clay & Glass Spring Festival will be on the grounds of Redeemer Lutheran Church, 1084 W Bullard in Fresno, Saturday, May 13, 10am – 3pm.

The Central Valley’s best clay and glass artists will be presenting their latest fine, fun, and functional works just in time for Mother’s Day. Exhibiting artists include ACGA members Kliss Glass @klissglass, Hannah Witter @hannah.rose_ceramics and Ren Lee @renleestudio will be on hand along with 25 other accomplished local artisans working in clay and glass.

Please like and follow @sanjoaquinclayandglass on Instagram.

Posted by Ren Lee @renleestudio/renlee000@gmail.com

North Auburn Studio Tours 2023

NORTH AUBURN ART STUDIOS TOUR

 

The much-anticipated 25 th Anniversary North Auburn Artists’ Studio Tour will be held Mother’s Day weekend, May 13th &14th. Twenty-one well-known North Auburn artists will be showing their art at 14 different studios. The FREE tour is open to the public on Saturday and Sunday from 10:00 AM until 5:00 PM.

There are sculptors, ceramic artists, painters, photographers, glass artisans, wood workers, jewelry, textile and fiber artists on the tour. This is an opportunity to watch the artists working in their studios and ask questions about the medium they create in. This is an event that will interest and please the whole family. You may also purchase and take-home original works of art, cards or prints from the studios. An online tour guide is available at the
website www.northauburnartists.com

Submitted by Hannah & Alana Nicholson van Altena

New Soda Kiln at Stanford

BARBARA GLYNN PRODANIUK’S SPRING OPEN STUDIO

June 2,3 &4
10 am-5 pm each day
15576 Waterloo Circle
Truckee, Ca 96161

Come enjoy a lovely day in Truckee,
browse a wide selection of functional
pottery and sculptural pieces in both an
outdoor garden setting and inside my potterystudio.
Posted by Barbara Glynn Prodaniuk
https://bgppottery.com/
@bgprodaniuk

Vicki Gunter

Visions in Clay Call for Entries

Entry is open now through June 26, 2023
Exhibition Juror:
Joan Takayama-Ogawa, Professor of Ceramics and Product Design, Otis College of Art & Design, Los Angeles,California

Gallery & Online Exhibition:
August 28 – September 21, 2023
August 31, 5:00-7:00p.m.

Gallery Awards
$800 | $600 | $400
San Joaquin Potters Guild Founders Award ~ $300
Regional Artist Award $800

Entry Fees:
$30 for 3 entries / $45 up to 6 entries
For the complete Prospectus Guidelines and to enter go to:
gallery.deltacollege.edu

– Call for entries
LH Horton Jr. Gallery, San Joaquin Delta College
5151 Pacific Ave.
Stockton, CA

ONGOING EXHIBITIONS

Delicious – A visual art exhibit about culinary delights

Art Works Downtown – Delicious 1337 Fourth Street, San Rafael

April 7–May 20, 2023   Thursday–Saturday, 1–8pm April 14, 5–8pm

OFF CENTER 2023: An International Ceramic Art Competition

April 8 – May 20

Blue Line Arts 405 Vernon St #100, Roseville

OFF CENTER is Blue Line Arts’ annual ceramic art competition, juried each year from entries from across the nation and abroad. The exhibition hosts work from 41 different artists working in a variety of styles, from functional studio pottery to imaginative installations. Alongside OFF CENTER, you can also catch solo exhibitions in different mediums for Nina Temple, Robert Obier, and Brooke Aruffo. Blue Line Arts @bluelinearts www.bluelinearts.org, 405 Vernon St #100, Roseville, CA 95678.  Open Tuesday through Saturday from 11–5 pm or by appointment.

ACGA Members Showing

Mary Catherine Bassett: @mcrathergather www.marycatherinebassett.com,

Michele Collier: @burningclay www.burningclay.blogspot.com,

Mari Emori: @emoriceramics www.berkeleypotters.com,

Vince Montague: @vincemontague www.vincemontague.com,

Jan Schachter: @janschachter www.janschachter.com

Clay & Earth . Where We Stand . NY2CA Gallery

April 20  – June 4

Vicki Gunter exhibits 16 eco-justice ceramic sculptures, as the first invited artist to NY2CA, a new Gallery in Benicia, CA. A Percentage of all Vicki’s sales will equally benefit SFBaykeeper and Sogorea Te’ Land Trust. She is collaborating with Greenpeace creating QR codes for visitors to further explore and contextualize each sculpture. This is a Dual exhibition with NY2CA co-owner and painter Terry Twigg. Your purchase can support art, the SF Bay watershed, Indigenous Ohlone, a new gallery, your joy and sanity!

HOW RECENT CHANGES TO OUR ACGA COMMUNICATIONS HELP OUR MEMBERS

Our communications tools now allow members to post their news items directly to the ACGA News Blog, for daily publication. Posts must be admin-approved and may take up to 48 hours to appear in the blog. Incomplete submissions may take longer. The web-based news blog is a living document and posts items in the order they are published. You can scroll through the entire history of the ACGA News here: https://acga.net/acga-news/.

In addition, our monthly ACGA newsletter is emailed to approximately 5500 subscribers. This news is less time-sensitive than more immediate forms of communication such as the news blog and our social media accounts on Instagram and Facebook.

Social media is the most effective and most instantaneous way to reach your audience, provide a platform that can be posted to repeatedly and often. We encourage members to cultivate their own social media accounts on facebook and instagram, to build your own audience and market your wares. We are happy to amplify your message to our followers from time to time when the following conditions are met:

  • Captions must include who, what, where, when details.
  • Posts must relate to something a collector or student can engage with such as a gallery event, an open studio, or an upcoming sale. Posts that lack context will not be reposted.
  • We will not repost items projecting more than 2 weeks in the future.
  • Posts should be tagged @theacga to ensure we can find them

ACGA social media accounts have more than 17,000 followers, so following these guidelines could be valuable to you. News items must be written in grammatically correct form, include all details including names (first and last) of members involved, links to artist websites or social media, studio or gallery locations and hours of operation.

Be aware that we have over 350 members and will strive to be fair and equitable, and to showcase the wide variety of accomplished artists who comprise our group. Publication is not guaranteed, and is not a perquisite of membership. If you have an event with frequent updates or an extended window of time, we expect you to manage your news on your end and we may or may not repost at our discretion.

CLICK HERE FOR SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

ACGA GENERAL MEETING MINUTES – April 11, 2023

Date of Next Meeting: Monday, May 8, 2023, 5:30pm

READ APRIL MEETING MINUTES
All ACGA members in good standing are invited to attend our monthly board meeting on zoom. To receive a zoom invitation for the next meeting, email your request to Mari Emori, emori.mari@gmail.com.

LISTINGS

SEE EVENTS CALENDAR:
https://acga.net/events-calendar/
This space is envisioned for future listings of upcoming calendar events. Since we have only just launched the submission process in this mailing, we do not have any current events at this time. Please follow the submission process outlined herein.

Professional Kiln Repair Service
NorCal Kiln Repair- “Professional Bay Area repair service since 2006”
· evaluation & repair: ceramic & glass kilns (gas & electric)
· tutorials: operation, safety, maintenance, custom programming
· evaluation & repair: pottery wheels, pug mills, slab rollers
· ventilation repair & installation / studio safety & setup consultations
· new & used kiln recommendations / appraisals: buying & selling
· ceramics troubleshooting: clays, glaze, construction, firing, etc.
Joseph Kowalczyk (Ko-väl-chick)
kiln & ceramics specialist
510 601-5053 · NorCalKilnRepair@gmail.com
www.norcalkilnrepair.com

ACGA NETWORKING EXPLAINED
Address changes and Membership Changes – Please send all address changes to the membership chair EmilYanos,
acgamembership@gmail.com

.
ACGA’s Website – Check out our website

The home page now features an ‘artist of the month.’ Populate your own page, and update often. To create and edit your profi  le page, go to the For Members menu, choose Member login, and follow the instructions to find and edit your profile.
Need a website password? Email Emil Yanos at
acgamembership@gmail.com

We look forward to hearing from you!

Follow and Like us on FaceBook (@ClayandGlass) and Instagram (@theACGA)
The ACGA News is sent through MailChimp. If your email bounces you or you have been unsubscribed, you can sign up again – contact Communications Lead Ren Lee at: news@acga.net.

Join the ACGA social media group www.facebook.com/groups/ACGASocialMedia

GOOGLE GROUP
Link to the Google group: the-acga@googlegroups.com

To email all members via the ACGA Google group you must be a member. Address your clay/glass-related message to: the-acga@googlegroups.com
There are two ways that you can engage in google groups without a gmail account:
1. Via email only
With a non-gmail email address you can still participate in all of the google group activities by replying to emailsand/or sending an email to the-acga@googlegroups.com to start a new thread. You do not have to create any google accounts to do this. If you’re seeing this email, then you’re in the group and can respond to emails like this one that will be sent to the entire group.

More details on how to create and respond to google group messages in the FAQ!
2. Make a google account
While it’s not necessary to have a google account to participate in the google group, you can create one with your non-gmail email address to get access to the google group site, which just aggregates the ACGA google group conversations in one place that’s easy to review and search.

Board of Directors – 2023
2023 Officers
President: Mari Emori
Vice President: TBD
Secretary: Sally Jackson
Treasurer: April Zilber
Lee Middleman, Jan Schachter, Joe Battiato, Emil Yanos, Trudy Chiddix, Cheryl Costantini,
Chris Johnson, Ren Lee, Susie Rubenstein, Iver Hennig, Sonja Hinrichson, Vicki Gunter, Barbara Prodaniuk

Committee Chairs
Communication – Ren Lee
Exhibitions – Jan Schachter
Festival Liaison – April Zilber
Festival Jury Coordinator – Chris Johnson
Historian – Cuong Ta
Int’l Ambassador – Barbara Brown
Membership Coordinator – Emil Yanos

By |2023-05-25T14:54:45-07:00May 20th, 2023|Newsletter|Comments Off on Newsletter May 2023

ACGA Board Meeting Minutes: April 2023

ACGA Board Meeting Minutes

April 10, 2023 via Zoom

Present: Mari Emori (president), April Zilber (treasurer), Sally Jackson (secretary), Joe Battiato, Chris Johnson, Lee Middleman, Cheryl Costantini, Emil Yanos, Iver Hennig, Trudy Chiddix, Vicki Gunter, Sonja Hinrichsen, Jan Schachter, Susie Rubenstein, Ren Lee, Barbara Prodaniuk

The meeting commenced at 5:30 p.m.

Welcome (Mari)

The new newsletter goes out to our general mailing list of 5000+ names. If members don’t renew, we’ll switch them to this mailing list so that they still receive the newsletter.

Treasurer’s Report (April)

Total assets as of March 30 were $116,911. We’ve received 34% of our budgeted income for the year. We discussed whether to modify how we handle some of our investment money in order maximize returns. April will look into current options, including CDs.

Festival Report (April)

The volunteer sign-up form for festival artists will go out soon. Postcard design is underway. We currently have 105 artists signed up for the show. Ren would like everyone to submit photos of last year’s festival, especially photos that show happy customers, sales in progress, booths, and so on (no milling crowds). The website will begin to highlight and update festival information with help from our publicist Kathy Maug.

Communications (Susie)

Please continue to submit material to the newsletter and the calendar. A link to the calendar will be added to the newsletter. Interviews with artists like the one in the April 2023 newsletter will continue to give ACGA a more public face. Emphasis will alternate between ceramics and glass. Posts on Instagram will do more as far as spreading news, information, and announcements. Tag the ACGA (#theacga, @theacga) in your posts and Ren will repost them. We now have 14,000 followers on Instagram.

Zoom Access (April)

We are in the process of working out a way for some board members to have access to the Zoom account for board meetings and committee meetings. Meetings would have to be scheduled so that they don’t overlap.

Jury (Chris)

We’ve received 23 applications for the current jurying. Discussion focused on whether to modify a long-standing “modified by heat” rule for clay and glass artists; this rule excludes stained-glass artists from festival eligibility. The Board voted 15-1 to accept applications from stained-glass artists, effective immediately. Jurors will evaluate the work using the same strict artistic criteria as applied to other types of submissions.

Storage Unit (April)

There are storage units in Sunnyvale and Santa Clara that are less expensive than our unit in Berkeley. April will pick a location and a convenient date this month for moving everything, and she’ll recruit volunteers to help.

Exhibitions (Jan, Susie)

We’re still working on trying to set up a future exhibition with Benicia Arts.

In Santa Cruz, we’re working with the gallery Curated by the Sea to organize an exhibition that will open in early April 2024 and will run for several weeks.

Susie is exploring the possibility of an exhibition at Mount San Antonio College in Walnut, CA.

Artist-of-the-Month (Emil)

Emil is working out a protocol for choosing the Artist-of-the-Month for our website, and asked that we email him our ideas by the end of the month. We agree that this feature should highlight both established artists and emerging artists.

The meeting adjourned at 7:15 p.m.

Next Meeting: 5:30 p.m., Monday, May 8, 2023 via Zoom

All are welcome!

By |2023-05-09T20:23:33-07:00May 9th, 2023|Board Meeting|Comments Off on ACGA Board Meeting Minutes: April 2023

Menagerie: Animals Real & Imagined opens in Fresno

Menagerie: Animals Real & Imagined opened for an Artists Art Hop Reception May 4 and will be open through May. This exhibit showcases Central Valley clay artists at Clay Hand Studios Gallery in Fresno. Artists invited to exhibit include ACGA members Ren Lee @renleestudio, Hannah Witter @hannah.rose_ceramics, and 15 more area clay artists. Clay Hand Studios Gallery is at 660 Van Ness in Fresno, Gallery is open 10-4 Tuesday – Saturday.

By |2023-05-05T09:27:58-07:00May 5th, 2023|ACGA News|Comments Off on Menagerie: Animals Real & Imagined opens in Fresno
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