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Checklist of Anniversary Acquisitions
Checklist of Anniversary Acquisitions As of August 1, 2002 Note to the Reader The works of art illustrated in color in the preceding pages represent a selection of the objects in the exhibition Gifts in Honor of the 125th Anniversary of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The Checklist that follows includes all of the Museum’s anniversary acquisitions, not just those in the exhibition. The Checklist has been organized by geography (Africa, Asia, Europe, North America) and within each continent by broad category (Costume and Textiles; Decorative Arts; Paintings; Prints, Drawings, and Photographs; Sculpture). Within each category, works of art are listed chronologically. An asterisk indicates that an object is illustrated in black and white in the Checklist. Page references are to color plates. For gifts of a collection numbering more than forty objects, an overview of the contents of the collection is provided in lieu of information about each individual object. Certain gifts have been the subject of separate exhibitions with their own catalogues. In such instances, the reader is referred to the section For Further Reading. Africa | Sculpture AFRICA ASIA Floral, Leaf, Crane, and Turtle Roundels Vests (2) Colonel Stephen McCormick’s continued generosity to Plain-weave cotton with tsutsugaki (rice-paste Plain-weave cotton with cotton sashiko (darning the Museum in the form of the gift of an impressive 1 Sculpture Costume and Textiles resist), 57 x 54 inches (120.7 x 115.6 cm) stitches) (2000-113-17), 30 ⁄4 x 24 inches (77.5 x group of forty-one Korean and Chinese objects is espe- 2000-113-9 61 cm); plain-weave shifu (cotton warp and paper cially remarkable for the variety and depth it offers as a 1 1. -
JESSE RING: Sculpture
CV JESSE RING: sculpture EDUCATION -2013-2015 MFA in Ceramics, New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University, Alfred, NY |AlfredCeramics.com -2002-2006 BFA in Ceramics with minor studies in Painting, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, MO. | KCAI.edu SOLO EXHIBITIONS -2015 “Paper Moon”, Thesis Exhibition, Fosdick Nelson Gallery, Alfred University, Alfred, NY. (Curatorial Advisor Sharon McConnell) -2012 “Moonlight Mythstakes & Summerscape-isms” Carbondale Clay Center, Carbondale, CO. (Curated by K Cesark) -2011 “Enshrined” Springfield Pottery, Springfield, MO -2010 “Monuments Too” Gilloiz Theater Lobby, Springfield, MO “Collagescape” The Albatross, Springfield, MO. June 2010- Jan 2011 -2008 “Vagrant Opulence” Via Viva, Mural Opening, Carbondale, CO. SELECTED EXHIBITIONS -2017 “Confluence and Bifurcations” NCECA Exhibition, Oregon College of Art and Craft, Portland, OR. -2016 “Modern Makers” Bathgate, Cincinatti, OH. (Jurors:) “SOFA Chicago” University of Cincinatti Booth 220, Chicago, IL. “Inhale” Aotu Studio, Beijing, China. (Curator Jialin Yang) “Bang Bang” Open Gate Gallery, Caochangdi, Beijing, China “Planning the Improbable, Sketching the Impossible” Washington Street Arts Center, Invitational, Boston, MA (Curator Mitch Shiles) “Clay Landmarks” The Arabia Steamboat Museum, Invitational Site Specific Group Show, Kansas City, MO. (Curator Allison Newsome) -2015 “Art in Craft Media-2015” Burchfield Penny Museum, Buffalo, NY. (Juror Wayne Higby, Curator Scott Propeak) “ Midwest Life Vest” University of Nebraska Kearney, Kearny, NS. (Curator Amy Santoferarro) “History in the Making” Carbondale Clay Center, Carbondale, CO. (Curator Jill Oberman) “Variance” The Wurks Gallery, Providence, RI. -2013 “Sustain” Art House Delray, Delray Beach, FL. (Curators Jade Henderson and Chelsea Odum) “Resident Artist Show” Armory Art Center, West Palm Beach, FL. “Beyond the Brickyard” Archie Bray Foundation, Helena, MT. -
Curriculum Vitae Ezra Shales, Ph.D. [email protected] Professor
Curriculum Vitae Ezra Shales, Ph.D. [email protected] Professor, Massachusetts College of Art and Design Publications Books Holding Things Together (in process) Revised editions and introductions to David Pye, Nature and Art of Workmanship (1968) and Pye, Nature and Aesthetics of Design (1964) (Bloomsbury Press, 2018) The Shape of Craft (Reaktion Books, anticipated publication Winter 2017-2018) Made in Newark: Cultivating Industrial Arts and Civic Identity in the Progressive Era (Rutgers University Press, 2010) Peer-Reviewed Scholarly Publications “Craft” in Textile Terms: A Glossary, ed. Reineke, Röhl, Kapustka and Weddigen (Edition Immorde, Berlin, 2016), 53-56 “Throwing the Potter’s Wheel (and Women) Back into Modernism: Reconsidering Edith Heath, Karen Karnes, and Toshiko Takaezu as Canonical Figures” in Ceramics in America 2016 (Chipstone, 2017), 2-30 “Eva Zeisel Recontextualized, Again: Savoring Sentimental Historicism in Tomorrow’s Classic Today” Journal of Modern Craft vol. 8, no. 2 (November 2015): 155-166 “The Politics of ‘Ordinary Manufacture’ and the Perils of Self-Serve Craft,” Nation Building: Craft and Contemporary American Culture (Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2015), 204-221 “Mass Production as an Academic Imaginary,” Journal of Modern Craft vol. 6, no. 3 (November 2013): 267-274 “A ‘Little Journey’ to Empathize with (and Complicate) the Factory,” Design & Culture vol. 4, no. 2 (Summer 2012): 215-220 “Decadent Plumbers Porcelain: Craft and Modernity in Ceramic Sanitary Ware,” Kunst Og Kultur (Norwegian Journal of Art and Culture) vol. 94, no. 3 (Fall 2011): 218-229 “Corporate Craft: Constructing the Empire State Building,” Journal of Modern Craft vol. 4, no. 2 (July 2011): 119-145 “Toying with Design Reform: Henry Cole and Instructive Play for Children,” Journal of Design History vol. -
The Wood Turning Center Is a Non-Profit Arts Institution Dedicated
Chronological List of Exhibitions & Publications The Center for Art in Wood 141 N. 3rd Street | Philadelphia, PA 19106 | 215-923-8000 Exhibitions in italics were accompanied by publications. Title of exhibition catalogue is listed with its details. 2012 Hooked on Wood: The Allure of the Fish Decoy, The Center for Art in Wood, May 18 – July 21, 2012, Curated by Dick Walters, Adviser Gene Kangas. Hooked on Wood, showcases modern wood fish decoys and highlights historical works as early as 3000 years ago. Today fish decoys are appreciated for their beauty as polychrome sculptures and are evaluated on their ability to move in the water to attract real fish. Families and people of all ages will be astonished and delighted at the utter creativity and craftsmanship in this exhibit. Over 100 fish decoys are on display: Ice spearing decoys – a handmade utilitarian tool, trophy fish – decorative piscatorial portraits, and folk sculpture. 2012 Life Aquatic, The Center for Art in Wood, May 18 – July 21, 2012. In conjunction with Hooked on Wood, The Center invited six artists to exhibit work inspired by and in response to themes of sea life. Pulling inspiration from water, sea animals and plants the artists produced captivating sculptures, wall hangings, and even imaginative creatures that may lurk in the abyss. Exhibited Artists: Michael De Forest, Satoshi Fujinuma, Michael Hosulak, Janel Jacobson, Merryll Saylan, and David Sengel. 2011 Turning to Art in Wood: A Creative Journey, The Center for Art in Wood, November 4, 2011 – April 21, 2012. Curator: Gerard Brown. Celebrating the 25th anniversary of Philadelphia’s renowned Wood Turning Center as it takes a new name—The Center for Art in Wood—and moves to an exciting new location among the art galleries in Old City. -
The Factory of Visual
ì I PICTURE THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE LINE OF PRODUCTS AND SERVICES "bey FOR THE JEWELRY CRAFTS Carrying IN THE UNITED STATES A Torch For You AND YOU HAVE A GOOD PICTURE OF It's the "Little Torch", featuring the new controllable, méf » SINCE 1923 needle point flame. The Little Torch is a preci- sion engineered, highly versatile instrument capa- devest inc. * ble of doing seemingly impossible tasks with ease. This accurate performer welds an unlimited range of materials (from less than .001" copper to 16 gauge steel, to plastics and ceramics and glass) with incomparable precision. It solders (hard or soft) with amazing versatility, maneuvering easily in the tightest places. The Little Torch brazes even the tiniest components with unsurpassed accuracy, making it ideal for pre- cision bonding of high temp, alloys. It heats any mate- rial to extraordinary temperatures (up to 6300° F.*) and offers an unlimited array of flame settings and sizes. And the Little Torch is safe to use. It's the big answer to any small job. As specialists in the soldering field, Abbey Materials also carries a full line of the most popular hard and soft solders and fluxes. Available to the consumer at manufacturers' low prices. Like we said, Abbey's carrying a torch for you. Little Torch in HANDY KIT - —STARTER SET—$59.95 7 « '.JBv STARTER SET WITH Swest, Inc. (Formerly Southwest Smelting & Refining REGULATORS—$149.95 " | jfc, Co., Inc.) is a major supplier to the jewelry and jewelry PRECISION REGULATORS: crafts fields of tools, supplies and equipment for casting, OXYGEN — $49.50 ^J¡¡r »Br GAS — $49.50 electroplating, soldering, grinding, polishing, cleaning, Complete melting and engraving. -
Ceramics Monthly Oct02 Cei10
Ceramics Monthly October 2002 1 editor Ruth C. Butler associate editor Kim Nagorski assistant editor Renee Fairchild assistant editor Sherman Hall proofreader Connie Belcher design Paula John production manager John Wilson production specialist David Houghton advertising manager Steve Hecker advertising assistant Debbie Plummer circulation manager Cleo Eddie circulation administrator Mary E. May publisher Mark Mecklenborg editorial, advertising and circulation offices 735 Ceramic Place Westerville, Ohio 43081 USA telephone editorial: (614) 895-4213 advertising: (614) 794-5809 classifieds: (614) 895-4220 circulation: (614) 794-5890 fax (614) 891-8960 e-mail [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] website www.ceramicsmonthly.org Ceramics Monthly (ISSN 0009-0328) is published monthly, except July and August, by The American Ceramic Society, 735 Ceramic Place, Westerville, Ohio 43081; www.ceramics.org. Periodicals postage paid at Westerville, Ohio, and additional mailing offices. Opinions expressed are those of the contributors and do not necessarily represent those of the editors or The American Ceramic Society. subscription rates: One year $30, two years $57, three years $81. Add $ 18 per year for subscriptions outside North America; for faster delivery, add $12 per year for airmail ($30 total). In Canada, add GST (registration num ber R123994618). change of address: Please give us four weeks advance notice. Send the magazine address label as well as your new address to: Ceramics Monthly, Circulation Department, PO Box 6136, Westerville, OH 43086-6136. contributors: Writing and photographic guidelines are available on request. Send manuscripts and visual support (slides, transparencies, photographs, drawings, etc.) to Ceramics Monthly, 735 Ceramic PI., Westerville, OH 43081. -
Newsletter Fall 2011 DATED Decorative Arts Society Arts Decorative Secretary C/O Lindsy R
newsletter fall 2011 Volume 19, Number 2 Decorative Arts Society DAS Newsletter Volume 19 Editor Gerald W.R. Ward Number 2 Katharine Lane Weems Senior Curator Fall 2011 of American Decorative Arts and Sculpture The DAS Museum of Fine Arts, Boston The DAS Newsletter is a publication of Boston, MA the Decorative Arts Society, Inc. The pur- pose of the DAS Newsletter is to serve as a The Decorative Arts Society, Inc., is a not- forum for communication about research, Coordinator exhibitions, publications, conferences and Ruth E. Thaler-Carter in 1990 for the encouragement of interest other activities pertinent to the serious Freelance Writer/Editor in,for-profit the appreciation New York of,corporation and the exchange founded of study of international and American deco- Rochester, NY information about the decorative arts. To rative arts. Listings are selected from press pursue its purposes, the Society sponsors releases and notices posted or received Advisory Board meetings, programs, seminars, and a news- from institutions, and from notices submit- Michael Conforti letter on the decorative arts. Its supporters ted by individuals. We reserve the right to Director include museum curators, academics, col- reject material and to edit materials for Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute lectors and dealers. length or clarity. Williamstown, MA The DAS Newsletter welcomes submis- Officers sions, preferably in digital format, submit- Wendy Kaplan President ted by e-mail in Plain Text or as Word Department Head and Curator, David L. Barquist attachments, or on a CD and accompanied Decorative Arts H. Richard Dietrich, Jr., Curator by a paper copy. -
Museum of Arts and Design
SPRING/SUMMER BULLETIN 2011 vimuseume of artsws and design Dear Friends, Board of Trustees Holly Hotchner LEWIS KRUGER Nanette L. Laitman Director Chairman What a whirlwind fall! Every event seemed in some way or another a new milestone for JEROME A. CHAZEN us all at 2 Columbus Circle. And it all started with a public program that you might have Chairman Emeritus thought would slip under the radar—Blood into Gold: The Cinematic Alchemy of Alejandro BARbaRA TOBER Chairman Emerita Jodorowsky. Rather than attracting a small band of cinéastes, this celebration of the Chilean- FRED KLEISNER born, Paris-based filmmaker turned into a major event: not only did the screenings sell Treasurer out, but the maestro’s master class packed our seventh-floor event space to fire-code LINDA E. JOHNSON Secretary capacity and elicited a write-up in the Wall Street Journal! And that’s not all, none other HOllY HOtcHNER than Debbie Harry introduced Jodorowsky’s most famous filmThe Holy Mountain to Director filmgoers, among whom were several downtown art stars, including Klaus Biesenbach, the director of MoMA PS1. A huge fan of this mystical renaissance man, Biesenbach was StaNLEY ARKIN DIEGO ARRIA so impressed by our series that beginning on May 22, MoMA PS1 will screen The Holy GEORGE BOURI Mountain continuously until June 30. And, he has graciously given credit to MAD and KAY BUckSbaUM Jake Yuzna, our manager of public programs, for inspiring the film installation. CECILY CARSON SIMONA CHAZEN MICHELE COHEN Jodorowsky wasn’t the only Chilean artist presented at MAD last fall. Several had works ERIC DObkIN featured in Think Again: New Latin American Jewelry. -
Ceramics Monthly Jan86 Cei01
William C. Hunt........................................ Editor Barbara Tipton ...................... Associate Editor Robert L. Creager ........................ Art Director Ruth C. Butler............................. Copy Editor Valentina Rojo ...................... Editorial Assistant Mary Rushley................ Circulation Manager Mary E. Beaver. Circulation Assistant Jayne Lohr .................... Circulation Assistant Connie Belcher .... Advertising Manager Spencer L. Davis.............................. Publisher Editorial, Advertising and Circulation Offices 1609 Northwest Boulevard Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212 (614) 488-8236 Ceramics Monthly (ISSN 0009-0329) is published monthly except July and August by Professional Publications, Inc.—S. L. Davis, Pres.; P. S. Emery, Sec.: 1609 North west Blvd., Columbus, Ohio 43212. Second Class postage paid at Columbus, Ohio. Subscription Rates:One year SI8, two years $34, three years $45. Add $5 per year for subscriptions outside the U.S.A. Change of Address:Please give us four weeks advance notice. Send both the magazine wrapper label and your new address to: Ceramics Monthly, Circulation Office, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212. Contributors: Manuscripts, photographs, color separations, color transparencies (in cluding 35mm slides), graphic illustrations, texts and news releases dealing with ceramic art and craft are welcome and will be con sidered for publication. A booklet describing procedures for the preparation and submis sion of a manuscript is available upon re quest. Send manuscripts and correspondence about them to: Ceramics Monthly, The Ed itor, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212. Telecommunications and Disk Media: Ceramics Monthly accepts articles and other data by modem. Phone us for transmission specifics. Articles may also be submitted on 3.5-inch microdiskettes readable with an Ap ple Macintosh computer system. Indexing:Articles in each issue of Ceramics Monthly are indexed in the Art Index. -
Ceramics Monthly Ceramics Monthly Volume 29, Number 4 April 1981
4 Ceramics Monthly Ceramics Monthly Volume 29, Number 4 April 1981 Features Robert Turner.............................................................. 28 F. Carlton Ball: Autobiographical Notes, Part 2....................................................................... 32 Three Northwest Potters.............................................. 35 Containers .................................................................. 40 Summer Workshops 1981 .......................................... 41 Malibu Tile.................................................................. 47 Stephen DeStaebler by Elaine Levin...........................54 A Conversation with Stephen DeStaebler by Sharon Edwards ................................................ 60 Departments Letters to the Editor..................................................... 9 Answers to Questions.................................................. 11 Where to Show............................................................ 13 Itinerary....................................................................... 19 Suggestions ................................................................. 23 Comment: The Critique by Don Bendel ...................... 25 News & Retrospect ..................................................... 65 New Books.................................................................. 95 Index to Advertisers.................................................... 98 Cover “Wall Canyon,” 37 feet in height, unglazed stone ware, by Stephen DeStaebler, for the Embarcadero Station -
Bennett Bean Playing by His Rules by Karen S
March 1998 1 2 CERAMICS MONTHLY March 1998 Volume 46 Number 3 Wheel-thrown stoneware forms by Toshiko Takaezu at the American Craft FEATURES Inlaid-slip-decorated Museum in vessel by Eileen New York City. 37 Form and Energy Goldenberg. 37 The Work of Toshiko Takaezu by Tony Dubis Merino 75 39 George Wright Oregon Potters’ Friend and Inventor Extraordinaire by Janet Buskirk 43 Bennett Bean Playing by His Rules by Karen S. Chambers with Making a Bean Pot 47 The Perfect Clay Body? by JejfZamek A guide to formulating clay bodies 49 A Conversation with Phil and Terri Mayhew by Ann Wells Cone 16 functional porcelain Intellectually driven work by William Parry. 54 Collecting Maniaby Thomas G. Turnquist A personal look at the joy pots can bring 63 57 Ordering Chaos by Dannon Rhudy Innovative handbuilding with textured slabs with The Process "Hair of the Dog" clay 63 William Parry maker George Wright. The Medium Is Insistent by Richard Zakin 39 67 David Atamanchuk by Joel Perron Work by a Canadian artist grounded in Japanese style 70 Clayarters International by CarolJ. Ratliff Online discussion group shows marketing sawy 75 Inspirations by Eileen P. Goldenberg Basket built from textured Diverse sources spark creativity slabs by Dannon Rhudy. The cover: New Jersey 108 Suggestive Symbols by David Benge 57 artist Bennett Bean; see Eclectic images on slip-cast, press-molded sculpture page 43. March 1998 3 UP FRONT 12 The Senator Throws a Party by Nan Krutchkoff Dinnerware commissioned from Seattle ceramist Carol Gouthro 12 Billy Ray Hussey EditorRuth -
Ceramics Evans Ceramic Supply Port Chester, NY 10573 Studio Supply 2100 N
OCTOBER 1979 $1.25 \ put Shimpo-West on the top of your list! ARIZONA COLORADO KANSAS Clay Art Center SOUTH CAROLINA 40 Beach St. A & A Potter's Warehouse Mile Hi Ceramics Evans Ceramic Supply Port Chester, NY 10573 Studio Supply 2100 N. Wilmot Rd. 1155 S. Cherokee 1518 S. Washington Box 546 Tucson. AZ 85712 Denver. CO 60223 Wichita, KS 67211 Dollman Ceramics Supplies Columbia, SC 29202 Char Mar Ceramics Van Howe Ceramic Supply 663 Walden Ave. 3454 N. 1st Ave. 11975 E. 40th St. KENTUCKY Buffalo, NY 14211 SOUTH DAKOTA Tuscon, AZ 85719 Denver, CO 80239 Owl Creek Pottery Earthworks Arts & Crafts West Sioux Ceramics Hill Brothers Van Howe Ceramic Supply 11416 Shelbyville Rd. 1667 Penfield Rd. 2315 W. Madison 4450N.42ndSt. 2602 Durango Louisville, KY40243 Rochester, NY 14625 Sioux FalIs, SD 57104 Phoenix, AZ 85019 Colorado Springs. CO 80910 MAINE Hilco Ceramics Marion Ceramic Shop CONNECTICUT 16 Elain Terrace TENNESSEE Portland Pottery & Gallery Camillus, NY 13031 Gallery 111 Phoenix,AZ3434W. Earl185017Dr' GayC°lest.CeramicRt. 41Lab°rat°ties 20portland.WestSt.ME 04120 Seeley's Ceramic Service, Inc. 122 Stadium Dr. Shop of Art Sharon, CT 06069 9 River St. Hendersonville, TN 37075 26 E. University Dr. Rusty Kiln MARYLAND Oneonta. NY 13820 House of Ceramics Tempe, AZ 85281 80 Garden St. Wurzbacker Ceramic Supply 1011 N. Hollywood ARKANSAS Wethersfield. CT 06109 Eagle Ceramics 213 Mineola Blvd. Memphis. TN 38108 12264 Wilkins Ave. Box 534 Boston Mountain Pottery Supply DELAWARE Rockville, MD 20852 Mineola, NY 11501 The Potter's Mark Rt. 1 Buckhorn Rd. 225 N. Gregg Eagle Ceramics MacMillian Arts & Crafts NORTH CAROLINA Gatlinburg.