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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20141024
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20141123
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T210603Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183254Z
UID:2442-1414108800-1416700799@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Adam Field\, Samuel Johnson and Peter Pincus Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Adam Field\, Samuel Johnson and Peter Pincus\nArtist Reception | November 14\, 2014 | 6:00  – 8:00 p.m.\nExhibition on view October 24 through November 22\, 2014 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present the work of Adam Field\, Samuel Johnson and Peter Pincus in a dynamic reassessment of surface. Using the pottery form as a catalyst for infinite variation\, these artists endeavor to reconcile their unique approach to mark-making with a conceptual interest in relationship to form. Field\, Johnson and Pincus set about to reevaluate the connection between form\, surface and content. \nAdam Field earned his BA in Art from Fort Lewis College. For two years he immersed himself in the San Francisco bay area\, where he began his full time studio practice. He relocated to Maui\, where he established a thriving studio business. He spent most of 2008 in Icheon\, South Korea\, studying traditional Korean pottery under 6th generation Onggi master Kim Il Mahn. In 2013 he created HIDE-N-SEEKAH at the NCECA conference in Houston\, TX. After maintaining his studio in Durango\, CO for 5 years\, Adam recently moved to Helena\, MT where he is a long-term artist in residence at The Archie Bray Foundation. \nSamuel Johnson is an Associate Professor of Art at the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University. Samuel has participated in sixty-eight exhibitions\, including seven solo exhibitions. His work is in the permanent collection of the North Dakota Museum of Art and featured in the book\, Stoked: Five Artists of Fire and Clay. Samuel grew up on the western prairie of the Red River Valley\, outside of Breckenridge\, Minnesota. Before earning his MA and MFA from the University of Iowa in 2005\, he apprenticed with Richard Bresnahan\, studied ceramic design at The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts – The School of Design in Copenhagen\, and worked in Japan as a studio guest of Koie Ryoji. He lives in St. Joseph\, Minnesota. \nPeter Pincus is a practicing artist\, living and making in Penfield\, NY\, and Visiting Professor of Ceramics at Rochester Institute of Technology. His work has been exhibited in venues such as the Museum of Contemporary Craft\, John Michael Kohler Arts Center\, San Angelo Museum of Fine Arts\, Icheon World Ceramics Center\, TRAX Gallery\, the Art of the Pot studio tour and National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts. A recipient of the NICHE award for slip cast ceramics\, Peter’s work can be found in numerous private and public collections. Peter received both his BFA (in 2005) and MFA (in 2011) from Alfred University.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/adam-field-samuel-johnson-and-peter-pincus/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Field-Johnson-Pincus-7.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140912
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20141011
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T210832Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183252Z
UID:2445-1410480000-1412985599@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Intersect\, Kenyon Hansen
DESCRIPTION:Intersect\nKenyon Hansen\nArtist Reception | Friday\, September 12\, 2014 | 6:00  – 8:00 p.m.\nExhibition on view through October 10\, 2014 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present the New York City solo exhibition debut of Michigan-based artist\, Kenyon Hansen. An artist with an active studio practice\, Hansen has invented a unique approach to form over his short but adventurous career. In the last few years Hansen has rendered his practice to an elegant\, vibrant and very distinctive form and surface. Hansen’s jars\, coffee pots\, mugs and teapots are some of the most original being made today. Sturdy and robust crockery that falls somewhere between farmhouse and modern. \n“I believe that finely crafted\, thoughtfully made pottery can contribute to a renaissance of tradition and habit. My hope is that the pots I make can play a role and be a factor in a renewal of ritual. Clay allows me to play with a physical language. When I throw or hand build\, I am engaged in the conversation\, curiosity often pushes the dialog\, while the desire to find something new guides me forward. I strive to create pottery that is both considered and balanced containing a healthy dose of spirit and care.” – Kenyon Hansen \nKenyon Hansen is a full-time studio potter from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. He has been an artist–in-residence at the Archie Bray Foundation\, where he was awarded the Lincoln Fellowship\, as well as Watershed Center for the Ceramic Arts. In 2013 he was selected as an Emerging Artist by Ceramics Monthly. Kenyon has taught at Haystack Mountain School of Crafts and Greenwich House Pottery in New York City. His functional ceramics can be found in galleries throughout the country and in friend’s homes. Kenyon is currently a visiting artist and adjunct instructor at Finlandia University in Hancock\, Michigan.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/intersect-kenyon-hansen/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Kenyon-Hanson-for-Website.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140815
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140907
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T211208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183251Z
UID:2448-1408060800-1410047999@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:GHP Faculty and Staff Exhibition 2014
DESCRIPTION:GHP Faculty and Staff Exhibition 2014\nExhibition on view August 15 through  September 6\, 2014 \n 
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/ghp-faculty-and-staff-exhibition-2014/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Faculty-Install-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140710
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140808
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T211521Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183249Z
UID:2451-1404950400-1407455999@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:On a Grecian Urn\, Adam Shiverdecker
DESCRIPTION:On a Grecian Urn\nAdam Shiverdecker\nExhibition on view July 10 through August 2\, 2014 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present the New York City solo exhibition debut of Manhattan-based artist\, Adam Shiverdecker. An artist with a unique approach to material\, Shiverdecker takes advantage of the “shortcomings” of the clay’s materiality. Wrapping it around high temperature wire and the subsequent heating it to temperatures beyond inhabitable to sustain life\, causes the ceramic to wither and crack along the armature. The result is a look of artifact and antiquity which makes the work all the more tragic and haunting. \nAdam’s work “imagines what would happen if the entire military arsenal were simply pushed into the ocean. I’m a committed pacifist\, but I am also drawn to the sleekness\, the power\, and the materiality of machines of war. My work attempts to represent my ambivalence to icons of military might by taking the forms of fighter jets\, submarines\, and missiles and denaturing their surfaces. By reforming weapons out of wire\, I reference both the practice of children’s war games and modeling…I then coat these structures in…clay\, allowing for an arbitrary amount of decay. It is this fantasy of decay…which my work tries to trigger. I also apply this logic to historical forms\, specifically Greek ceramic vessels. I’m interested in these Greek vessels because of the way they represent a culture that venerates war and conflict\, as this seems to anticipate elements of our own bellicose culture.”—Adam Shiverdecker \nAdam Shiverdecker is the Studio & Fabrications Manager of Greenwich House Pottery. Prior to accepting this position he was the Assistant Professor of 3D Interdisciplinary Art/Ceramics at The University of Toledo. Before assuming his role at Toledo\, he was the Artist-In-Residence in the ceramics program and adjunct faculty at Tyler School of Art and a two-time summer resident artist at The Archie Bray Foundation in Helena\, Montana (2009\, 2011). Adam was named an emerging artist by Ceramics Monthly and was the Myhre Scholar at The Archie Bray Foundation. Before pursuing his MFA at the University of South Carolina (2008)\, Adam graduated from the University of Toledo with a Bachelor of Education in Visual Arts (2005).
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/on-a-grecian-urn-adam-shiverdecker/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Adam-Shiverdecker-6.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140620
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140628
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T211845Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183246Z
UID:2454-1403222400-1403913599@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:cc pop up
DESCRIPTION:cc pop up\nCeramics Club\nExhibition on view June 20 through June 27\, 2014 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present ceramics from the group\, cc. The group will be exhibiting works they created while working in the studios at Greenwich House Pottery. \nThe president and copresident invite you to cc pop up: \n Dear Amateurs! \n Since 2009 we have met monthly….. and have made almost no progress\, but a heck of a lot of ceramics. \n Chicken legs\, ears\, pizza huts\, vagina bowls\, vagina one hitters\, tacos\, rocks and blocks\, bricks\, snake skins\, pickles\, whistles\, fritzcarraldos\, mickrey heads\, drum sets\, justice\, santa heads\, toilet paper holders\, water bottles\, trophies\, nice hair\, best tennis\, and mursic achievement\, snowwhite and dwarf and frenemy\, murgs for friends\, dog bowls\, interspecies spooning\, chicken pots\, dinner party redo\, lumpy bottles and tea kettles\, pugs\, broken frames\,…… \n Remember you asked for it and to please clean your mess. \n Questions? ask Adam!
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/cc-pop-up/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/cc-pop-up-for-website.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140522
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140613
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T212131Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183244Z
UID:2457-1400716800-1402617599@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:GHP Artists Exhibition 2014
DESCRIPTION:GHP Artists Exhibition 2014\nExhibition on view May 22 through June 12\, 2014 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present the Annual Greenwich House Pottery Artists Exhibition. Each Spring we honor and celebrate the talented individuals who sign up for class\, prolifically make work\, and bring vitality to our tight-knit clay community. The works on display are carefully selected by each artist\, and represent their most successful piece or own personal favorite. A ceramic showcase this vibrant\, varied\, and vast cannot be found often!
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/ghp-artists-exhibition-2014/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Ciric-Millen-Debow-Sjogren.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140410
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140511
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T212446Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183242Z
UID:2460-1397088000-1399766399@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Things I Learned From Comic Books and Bumper Stickers\, Kristen Morgin
DESCRIPTION:Things I Learned From Comic Books and Bumper Stickers\nKristen Morgin\nOpening Reception | Thursday\, April 10\, 2014 | 6:00  – 8:00 p.m.\nExhibition on view April 10 through May 10\, 2014 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present the solo exhibition of California-based artist\, Kristen Morgin. An artist with a diverse studio practice\, Morgin makes work referencing death and decay via enormous unfired clay sculptures and equally as elegant small scale trompe l’oeil ceramic sculptures referencing everyday objects and pop iconography. The work on display here represents her sculptures from her very own collection\, work that she has held onto\, which lends itself to insight into the artist’s relationship to her work. \n“I started out that way but recently I began to create pieces from things I already know I like and live with\, tributary objects that look like their model. The first piece I did like this was a Monopoly game I had at home. I wanted to take this mass produced item and make it one of a kind. When I was creating it I was thinking about my own history with the game. It occurred to me that the goal was to annihilate your opponent and take all their assets… Relationships started to happen when I was making work for the table. Sometimes the objects next to their models are like a longtime married couple that need each other and bring out the best in one another. At other times there is a confrontation and one piece overtakes the other. I liked these conversations and it brought a new dialogue to the work.”—Kristen Morgin \nKristen L. Morgin was born in 1968 in Brunswick\, GA.  Kristen is the eldest daughter of Lowell and Lucille Morgin.  She has three younger sisters. Kristen earned a BA degree from California State University\, Hayward.  Kristen earned a MFA degree with an emphasis in ceramics from Alfred University in 1997.  Kristen currently resides in Gardena\, CA. Kristen has held job positions as a gallery docent\, a children’s playhouse set painter\, a secretary in an auto glass shop\, and a professor of art.  She currently earns her living as an artist.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/things-i-learned-from-comic-books-and-bumper-stickers-kristen-morgin/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/KristenWeb-12.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140228
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140328
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T212723Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183238Z
UID:2463-1393545600-1395964799@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Concrescence\, Ted Adler
DESCRIPTION:Concrescence\nTed Adler\nArtist Reception | Friday\, February 28\, 2014 | 6:00  – 8:00 p.m.\nExhibition on view through March 27\, 2014 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present Kansas-based artist\, Ted Adler\, in his New York City solo exhibition debut. Adler makes biomorphic abstractions using the vessel as a metaphor for the figure. These current wood fired vessels are his latest in his documenting the effects of process and time\, simulating an experience of existence\, which Adler references with his title\, Concrescence\, a term of Alfred Whitehead’s denoting the formation of an entity\, giving form to formlessness. \n“Clay is interesting…as both a material and a metaphor. When making\, I look to engage a sense of “madeness” through the plasticity of the material and the sensuous\, fluid volumes of the vessel. The rich\, varied surfaces of wood-firing convey the change and flux of the kiln environment. These processes tend to capture the sense of clay’s protean malleability that enhances the way that the objects might be interpreted as a metaphor for the fugitive nature of experience. By using the vessel as an analogy for selfhood and subjecting it to processes of forming and firing that lend themselves to a sense of transformation (which is both actual and figural)\, I hope to elicit a sense that our relationship to ourselves and the world around us is more slippery than we ordinarily like to admit.” –Ted Adler \nTed Adler is Associate Professor of Art and Area Head of Ceramics Media at Wichita State University. He received his BA from Lewis and Clark College in Portland\, OR in 1993 and his MFA from Ohio University in Athens\, OH in 2002. Adler also studied with renowned artist Toshiko Takaezu\, with whom he apprenticed for more than a year in her Quakertown\, NJ studio. Adler has exhibited work in more than 75 exhibitions in addition to lecturing and demonstrating at numerous ceramic centers and universities across the nation\, including the Archie Bray Foundation\, Arrowmont School of Crafts\, and the Anderson Ranch Art Center.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/concrescence-ted-adler/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Ted-Adler-Web-9.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20130411
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20130510
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T214337Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183124Z
UID:2479-1365638400-1368143999@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:red\, blue\, and white\, Steven Lee
DESCRIPTION:red\, blue\, and white\nSteven Lee\nApril 11 – May 9\, 2013 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present Montana-based artist Steven Young Lee in New York City Solo Exhibition debut. Lee explores identity through the appropriation of historical style. Though his approach is characteristically postmodern and he addresses identity through the substance of existence via cultural constructions\, his approach is refreshingly not ironical. \n“My work investigates how individual realities are formed. I am fascinated in concepts and development of self that are based on identification with environment\, traditions and superstitions while often straddling cultural boundaries…challenge[ing] preconceptions that can reshape our sense of identity and culture…I see these as reminders of the past\, but also as objects that I have become emotionally invested in discovering my own sense of place.”—Steven Young Lee \nSteven Young Lee is the Resident Artist Director of the Archie Bray Foundation in Helena\, Montana. A native of Chicago\, Lee received his MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 2004. In 2004-5\, he lectured and taught at numerous universities throughout China. While there\, he created a new body of work as part of a one-year cultural and educational exchange fellowship in Jingdezhen\, Jianxi Province. A former Bray resident\, Steven also spent a year teaching at the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design in Vancouver\, B.C. in 2005-2006. \nIn the United States\, he has taught classes at Alfred University\, Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan\, the Clay Art Center in New York and the Lillstreet Studio in Chicago. His work has been exhibited in China\, Canada and throughout the United States and is held in private collections in New York\, Pennsylvania\, Illinois and Montana.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/red-blue-and-white-steven-lee/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/IMG_1577crop.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20130228
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20130327
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190610T214608Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T183126Z
UID:2482-1362009600-1364342399@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Perceptive Pleasure\, Rob Raphael & Jessica Stoller
DESCRIPTION:Perceptive Pleasure\nRob Raphael & Jessica Stoller\nFebruary 28 – March 26\, 2013 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present the work of Rob Raphael & Jessica Stoller. Related through medium and attitude\, both Raphael and Stoller work in porcelain exploring the perceptual connection of the material toward beauty and the perception of the feminine. Stoller examines the idea of beauty – a dialectical construct bound with the grotesque. Raphael creates architectonic minimalist forms imbued with pattern and decorative elements whose material components he enlists to create sexual tension. \n“I am interested in using clay as a vehicle to explore issues of idealized beauty\, vanity and the subjugation of the female body using porcelain as my primary media\, a material inextricably linked to secrecy\, desire and commodification. I create figurative-based sculptures that are often partially masked\, covered or unseen; calling viewers to witness these haunting works\, including bodies contorted in marred\, embellished form. From Marie Antoinette’s breast cup to the Venus of Willdendorf\, my work evokes forms and objectsof the past\, creating compelling ceramic sculptures that takes lineage from the vast history of the female body articulated in clay.” – Jessica Stoller \nJessica Stoller received her BFA from the College for Creative Studies\, and an MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art. Stoller’s work has been widely reviewed\, in such publications as The New York Times\, Ceramics: Art and Perception\, and N. Pandora Feminist Journal\, among others. She has been included in recent exhibitions at The Bronx Art Museum\, NY; Fuller Craft Museum\, MA; and Nuture Art\, NY. Solo show venues include Hionas Gallery\, NY; and The Clay Studio\, PA. Stoller has been honored to participate in residencies including the Kohler Arts & Industry Program\, WI and The Museum of Arts and Design’s Open Studio Program\, NY. A Daimler Chrysler Emerging Artist Nominee\, her work is also included in numerous private collections. \n“In my recent work\, I have been creating structures from unfinished lumber\, a traditional material for building. Ornamenting the lumber structures are delicate porcelain floral bouquets and geometric shapes fused together with dripping glaze and paint. I am interested in combining these perceived masculine and feminine materials to create a platform to investigate structure and ornament\, decoration and function\, and sexual difference.” – Robert Raphael \nRobert Raphael lives and works in Brooklyn\, New York. His work has been exhibited nationally\, including a solo exhibition at The Clay Studio (Philadelphia\, PA). Recent group exhibitions include Dean Project (New  York)\, Like the Spice Gallery (Brooklyn\, NY)\, The Fine Arts Center\, University of Arkansas (Fayetteville\, AR)\, and Delaware Center for Contemporary Art (Wilmington\, DE ). This spring Raphael will be exhibiting in the Bronx Museum’s Artist in the Marketplace Biennial. Raphael received his MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art\, and his BFA from Rhode Island School of Design.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/perceptive-pleasure-raphael-stoller/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Robert-Raphael-Jessica-Stoller-2-27-13-13949.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20121026
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20121122
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T153123Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182533Z
UID:2490-1351209600-1353542399@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:My Voice Changes When I Speak Your Language\, Linda Sormin
DESCRIPTION:My Voice Changes When I Speak Your Language\nLinda Sormin\nOctober 26 – November 21\, 2012 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present Linda Sormin’s new work in her first solo exhibition in New York City. \nSormin fills the gallery with intricate ceramic forms and invites an encounter with cultural and familial ghosts. Embroidering raw clay through objects she has found and re-purposed\, Sormin uses this collection of material and things to enact stories of her ancestral Batak Indonesian past and experiences as an immigrant moving between cultures. \n“Sormin practices the art of the slow burn– both literally… and also figuratively\, in that her sprawling installations communicate a carefully controlled fury. It is a vivid\, visual chamber music\, in which not a single note of pragmatism\, didacticism or functionalism can be heard… The visitor is encouraged to wander through this ceramic wonderland as if through an ancient forest.” –Glenn Adamson \nThrough objects and large-scale installations\, Linda Sormin’s work explores issues of fragility\, aggression\, mobility and survival. Born in Bangkok\, Sormin grew up in Canada and worked in community development for four years in Thailand and Laos. She studied literature and ceramics at Andrews University\, Sheridan School of Craft & Design (Diploma ’01) and Alfred University (MFA ’03). \nSormin’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally\, most recently at the West Norway Museum of Decorative Art (Bergen\, Norway)\, Denver Art Museum (Denver\, USA)\, gl Holtegaard (Denmark)\, Vallauris (France) and Middlesbrough (UK). From 2003-06 she taught ceramics at Emily Carr University of Art + Design (Vancouver\, BC) and the Rhode Island School of Design (Providence\, RI). She is currently Professor\, Head of Ceramics at the Sheridan School of Craft & Design in Oakville\, Canada.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/my-voice-changes-when-i-speak-your-language-linda-sormin/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/IMG_8688.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20120906
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20121005
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T154752Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182530Z
UID:2494-1346889600-1349395199@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Peter Gourfain
DESCRIPTION:SEPTEMBER 6 – OCTOBER 4\, 2012 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery at Greenwich House Pottery is pleased to present the work of artist Peter Gourfain. In his second solo exhibition at the Jane Hartsook Gallery\, Gourfain shows work that spans his life as an artist and exemplifies his interdisciplinary approach to art making—with prints\, drawings\, carvings\, bronze and ceramics. \n“For all his commitment to social justice\, what Gourfain does in the face of times like these is what all artists do: make art. Unlike most contemporary production\, Gourfain has never been restricted to the galleries and museums. And unlike most art not restricted to museums and galleries\, his is in fact “museum-quality” art\, wherever it is found. His production includes not only the paintings\, sculptures\, pots\, and prints shown in “high” art contexts\, but striking banners\, leaflets\, buttons\, and graphics that have also been seen in the streets\, the meetings\, the publications\, the demonstrations.” – Lucy R. Lippard \nPeter Gourfain was born in 1934 and received his BFA from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1956. He currently lives and in Brooklyn\, New York and has been on the faculty of Greenwich House Pottery since 1995. Gourfain has had solo exhibitions at the Projects Gallery in Philadelphia\, Pennsylvania\, the Elvehjem Museum in Madison\, Wisconsin\, the Patricia Hamilton Gallery in New York City and at the Brooklyn Museum\, in Brooklyn\, New York. His work has been included in the Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum\, the Corcoran Biennale at the Corcoran in Washington\, DC.\, the Museum of Modern Art and most recently at the National Academy of Fine Arts in New York City. Gourfain received the New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship\, a Guggenheim Fellowship and a New York State Council for the Arts Grant. He has been a visiting artist at the University of California Davis\, Penland School of Crafts\, Rhode Island School of Design and Skowhegan among others.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/peter-gourfain/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/23-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20120712
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20120810
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T155203Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182529Z
UID:2496-1342051200-1344556799@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Hope Rovelto
DESCRIPTION:Hope Rovelto\nJuly 12 – August 9\, 2012 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present the work of Hope Rovelto for her New York City Solo Exhibition debut. This work represents the culmination of her 10 months as Greenwich House Pottery’s Resident Artist. \n“My work involves contemporary issues in my life as well as those in the world around me. The individual and social topics I choose to depict are global issues that not only serve as a method in which to deal with my own frustrations with my past\, present and future\, but also serve as a way for viewers to think about frustrations in their own experience. I am influenced by American culture\, current media and politics\, and what I view as the degradation of the human experience through social and environmental poisons which plague our world. I feel that it is my job as an artist to not only explore these ideas but also present them\, provoking an awareness response. Because I believe that art reflects the world in which it exists\, politics and art often intersect. As we approach the 2012 presidential election\, I want to create a show that depicts the ever-growing tension in our intense political climate.” –Hope Rovelto \nHope Rovelto earned her BFA in sculpture from Maine College of Art and her MFA in ceramics from RIT. She has taught ceramics and art history at the University of the Arts and Philadelphia University. She owns a screen printing and ceramic decal business in Philadelphia\, and is currently finishing up a residency at Greenwich House Pottery in NYC. Hope was a resident artist at Watershed Center for Ceramic Arts\, where she currently sits on the Board of Directors. Other residencies Hope has participated in include Arrowmont School of Craft in TN\, Penland in NC\, and Oxbow in MI.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/hope-rovelto/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Hope-Rovelto-for-Website.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20120419
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20120518
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T160403Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182526Z
UID:2499-1334793600-1337299199@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Julia Haft-Candell and Benjamin DeMott
DESCRIPTION:Julia Haft-Candell and Benjamin DeMott\nApril 19 – May 17\, 2012 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present the work of Julia Haft-Candell and Benjamin DeMott. Their installation gives rise to an alternative way of seeing ourselves\, materials and the space between these components. This exhibition relates to the figurative – psychological\, physiological\, metaphorical and active and passive notions of impermanence\, mapping\, reclaiming\, and collecting. Beyond their conceptual affinities their work reflects a unique\, almost contrarian\, handling of the material prevalent in today’s expanded field. \n“Fragile\, thread-thin ceramic extrusions are tenuously bound to one another by glues and household fix-it material. The painfully delicate fired ceramic line\, zigs and zags splintering into a complex network where the familiarity of scale shifts from that of the watchmaker to the astronomer. Interspersed within these precarious structures are decorative debris…Highlighting impermanence\, these assemblages are contingent and situational\, potentially configured for only a short duration. A playful longing for solidity amidst operatives of change inspires this dialogue with material. My intent is to afford the audience a confrontation\, a friction between wonder\, awe and the trepidation felt by the prospects of uncertainty. I aim to explore what uncertainty has to offer.” –Benjamin DeMott \n“Through my work I am echoing the characteristics of a complex system. Seemingly disparate events align to form a whole. Each element of the system is unique\, yet needs the others in order to function\, as small changes in a part can drastically alter the integrity of the entire structure. By creating a vocabulary comprised of cells that are repetitively constructed\, added\, subtracted and rearranged\, I can speak of the phenomenal interconnectedness of all things… Ultimately the goal is to form a composition that most effectively speaks to the ambiguity of perception and the complexity of being.”—Julia Haft-Candell \nJulia Haft-Candell was born in Oakland\, California. She received an MFA from California State University Long Beach in 2010. She currently lives and works in Los Angeles. Benjamin DeMott was born in Allentown\, Pennsylvania. He earned an MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University and a BFA from Tyler School of Art at Temple University.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/julia-haft-candell-and-benjamin-demott/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/IMG_0781.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20120301
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20120330
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T160611Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182524Z
UID:2503-1330560000-1333065599@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Forehandedness\, David East
DESCRIPTION:Forehandedness\nDavid East\nMarch 1 – 29\, 2012 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present Forehandedness—new sculpture by Baltimore-based artist David S. East. For his first solo exhibition with this gallery\, East has created monuments of dailiness\, sculptures that combine ubiquitous ornamentation and serene pastels—at times uniting technology and woven fabric—offering a genealogy of cultural homogenization. East’s work is thoughtful however much the installation effortlessly transposes formalism and irony. \n“Through architectural and design references my work has revolved around issues of urban planning\,architectural ornament and design as signifiers of our cultural history. My work attempts to reveal the positive and negative by-products of our attempts to establish order. As Ebenezer Howard’s idealism gives way to white flight and Constance Spry is remade into Martha Stuart as a multi-national; my work attempts to trace these cycles\, combining the nostalgia of gingham with the high modernism of an Eames profile. The sources and images I have sought out: cheap Styrofoam knock-offs of classic decorative trim\, the rosette\, the mantle; become a mirror of the phenomena and peculiarities of an “American” point of view. The approach I have taken attempts to reflect on the monumental within the mundane\, and seeks to bore out the middle of modernism to see its split-level by-products. The work rotates around these axes operating as much a strategy of thinking as of making.”—David S. East \nDavid S. East is Chair of Ceramics at the Maryland Institute College of Art. East has taught as a visiting artist at the University of Missouri-Columbia (2001-2007)\, Alfred University\, Kansas City Art Institute\, Massachusetts College of Art\, Illinois State University\, Illinois Wesleyan University\, Washington University\, Ohio University and Tainan National College of Art\, Tainan\, Taiwan. East’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally in juried and curated exhibitions\, most recently at the GICBiennale 2011\, Icheon\, Korea. He has received numerous awards including an Individual Artist Award from the Maryland State Arts Council\, the Lighton Foundation and the McKnight Foundation. He was in residence at the European Ceramic Work Centre in 2007 and was recently the Visiting Artist in Residence at Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia\, PA. East received his BFA in Ceramics from the University of Wisconsin – River Falls (1997) and his MFA from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (2000).
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/forehandedness-david-east/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/IMG_9521b.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20120119
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20120217
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T160814Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182522Z
UID:2506-1326931200-1329436799@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Sightlines\, Michael Fujita
DESCRIPTION:Sightlines\nMichael Fujita\nJanuary 19 – February 16\, 2012 \nGreenwich House Pottery is pleased to present Michael Fujita’s New York City debut exhibition\, Sightlines.This exhibition features sculptures with architectural components placed within/alongside juxtaposed the architecture of the gallery. It is influenced by the observations of the commonplace as seen in his daily life\, the embodied experience\, the space between himself and his horizon. \n“Inspired by observations and materials found in the urban landscape\, Sightlines is and offering of objects that are reinterpretations of the landscape.” – Fujita \nMichael Fujita is currently on the faculty of Greenwich House Pottery and The Clay Studio in Philadelphia where he is serving his fifth year as resident artist. Before completing his MFA from Alfred University in 2008\, he received his BFA from Kansas City Art Institute.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/sightlines-michael-fujita/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Michael-Fujita-for-Website.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20110714
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20110812
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T183532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182325Z
UID:2519-1310601600-1313107199@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Yunomi\, A National Juried Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Yunomi\nA National Juried Exhibition\nJuly 14 – August 11\, 2011 \nThis National Juried Exhibition explores the vessel. “Yunomi” is a Japanese term for a teacup made for daily (informal) use and not for the tea ceremony. The exhibition features work by Karin Abromaitis\, Jeff Brown\, Tom Budzak\, Christopher Chaney\, Matt Conlon\, Fred Herbst\, Jim Connell\, Adam Field\, Yoshi Fujii\, Perry Haas\, Meredith Host\, Tom Jaszczak\, Kyle Johns\, Don Mengay\, Sean O’Connell\, Lorraine Oldeman\, Warren Smith\, and Ryan Strobel. \n\n		\n		\n			\n				\n			\n				\n				Jim Connell\n				\n			\n				\n			\n				\n				Sean O’Connell\n				\n			\n				\n			\n				\n				Lorraine Olderman\n				\n			\n				\n			\n				\n				Ryan Strobel
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/yunomi-a-national-juried-exhibition/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/OConnell_Sean_01.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20110303
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20110401
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T172801Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182323Z
UID:2513-1299110400-1301615999@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Place/Setting\, Sam Chung
DESCRIPTION:Place/Setting\nSam Chung\nMARCH 3 – MARCH 31\, 2011 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present a new installation by Arizona-based artist Sam Chung. For this New York City exhibition Chung has created a unique installation featuring place/settings on a custom built table for 16 people. \n“The large dinner setting presented here composes individual pieces of tableware into a larger topographical landscape.  This installation is informed by pottery traditions that reflect my own history and experiences. \nPlace\, as it relates to me\, begins with my experience as a second generation Korean-American growing up in Minnesota\, a state with a strong Scandinavian ancestry.  As I later traveled extensively throughout Asia\, I began to understand the duality of place and how it can feel simultaneously foreign and familiar. \nIn 2005\, I was a resident artist at Guldagergaard\, a ceramics center in Denmark.  It was here where I experienced a familiar reverence for the poetic simplicity of contemporary Scandinavian design and the porcelain-ware from Royal Copenhagen.  The work in Place/Setting pairs this discovery with my interest in Korean ceramics and my ongoing curiosity about my own ethnic origin.  The overall presentation provides a comment on cross-cultural identity from the intimacy of a domestic setting. ” -Sam Chung \nSam Chung was born in Minneapolis\, Minnesota and received his MFA from Arizona State University and his B.A. degree from St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota. In between undergrad and grad school he worked as a special post-bac student at the University of Minnesota. Chung taught at Northern Michigan University and is now teaching at Arizona State University in Tempe. He has had exhibitions at Cervini Haas\, AKAR\, Dubuque Museum of Fine Art\, Sherry Leedy\, Santa Fe Clay\, Lacoste\, Taipei County Yingge Museum\, and the Incheon World Ceramic Center. Chung has work in the collections of the Crocker Art Museum\, Incheon World Ceramic Center (Korea)\, Guldagergaard (Denmark)\, Shepparton Art Gallery (Australia)\, University of Arkansas\, and Arizona State University Ceramics Research Center. Chung has attended residencies at Anderson Ranch Arts Center\, Watershed\, Guldagergaard (Denmark)\, The Pottery Workshop (China). Chung’s work has been included in such publications as Contemporary Ceramics\, The Art of Contemporary American Pottery\, The Complete Guide to High Fire Glazes\, and Masters of Porcelain.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/place-setting-sam-chung/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Sam-Chung-for-Website.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20110120
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20110218
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T171906Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182321Z
UID:2510-1295481600-1297987199@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Folly\, Beth Katleman
DESCRIPTION:Folly\nBeth Katleman\nJanuary 20 – February 17\, 2011 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present a new installation by New York-based artist Beth Katleman\, whose work has been described by Ken Johnson in the New York Times as “doll-sized rococo theaters of murder and domestic mayhem.” Her deliciously subversive porcelain sculptures combine rococo ornament with icons from popular culture.” Katleman has created 50 porcelain tableaus each scene is an idealized landscape with water\, topiaries and architectural follies. \n“I have long been fascinated by Toile de Jouy\, the printed fabrics that drape the walls and beds of 18th century France. Peasants cavort in bucolic landscapes decked out with flowers\, all in the shadow of classical ruins. There is something surreal about these scenes\, which float\, disembodied in a world without gravity. I love the contrast between the ornate sensuality and frivolity of the scenes\, and the incongruous setting. Often the 2nd and 3rd generation knock-offs catch my eye\, especially those that project a sense of optimism\, as though they long for a grander existence” –Beth Katleman \nBeth Katleman was born in Park Forest\, Illinois. She holds a BA in English from Stanford University\, an MBA in Arts Management from UCLA and an MFA from Cranbrook. Her work is in many national collections\, including the M.H. de Young Museum\, San Francisco\, CA\, the John Michael Kohler Arts Center\, WI\, Kohler Company\, WI and the Archie Bray Foundation\, Helena\, MT. She has had solo exhibitions in Barneys New York windows and Sybaris Gallery\, Royal Oak\, MI. She has shown in exhibitions at M.H. de Young Museum\, Contemporary Jewish Museum\, San Francisco\, Garth Clark Gallery\, Thomas Healy Gallery\, Storefront for Art and Architecture\, New York and the National Building Museum\, Washington\, D.C. She has had reviews in the New York Times\, American Ceramics\, New Art Examiner\, and Sculpture Magazine. Her grants include a Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation grant\, Kohler Arts/Industry Fellowship\, Watershed Generation X Award\, and a residency in Cortona\, Italy. Katleman lives and works in Brooklyn\, New York.
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/folly-beth-katleman/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Folly-detail-2010-porcelain-and-wire-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20101203
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20110107
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T192250Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182207Z
UID:2538-1291334400-1294358399@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Form Follows Food
DESCRIPTION:Form Follows Food\nDecember 3\, 2010 – January 6\, 2011 \nThe Jane Hartsook Gallery is pleased to present form follows food\, an invitational exhibition celebrating the fine art of pairing food and drink with the perfect vessel. \nEach artist was invited to create a group of ceramics designed to enhance the delights of a certain type of food or drink – their choice. The results are as varied as the makers: from Marie Antoinette-inspired candy dishes to cozy pudding cups\, festive popcorn bowls and lobster dishes\, there is literally something here for every taste! \nThis special holiday exhibition and sale features new work by Nancy Bauch\, Posey Bacapoulos\, Leanne McClurg Cambric\, Sanam Emami\, Sarah Gross\, Molly Hatch\, Ayumi Horie\, Janice Jakielski\, Gail Kendall\, Michael Kline\, Gregg Moore\, Brooke Noble\, Lisa Orr\, Zena Verda Pesta\, Joe Pintz\, Sara Paloma\, Brenda Quinn\, Tyler Speicher\, Kala Stein\, Sue Tirrell and Cynthia Vardhan. \n 
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/form-follows-food/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Kala-Stein-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20091203
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20091221
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T194653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T182027Z
UID:2559-1259798400-1261353599@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:One More Than Five\, Resident Artists Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:One More Than Five\nResident Artists Exhibition: Jordan Becker\, Will Coggin\,\nCostain\, Stacy Cushman\, Kristen Wicklund\, Nicki Ritchie\nDecember 3 – 20\, 2009 \n  \n  \n\n		\n		\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				\n			\n			\n		\n\n  \n  \n 
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/one-more-than-five-resident-artists-exhibition/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/1-More-Than-5-Web-17.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20090108
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20090210
DTSTAMP:20260404T133958
CREATED:20190611T193447Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240604T181808Z
UID:2543-1231372800-1234223999@greenwichhouse.org
SUMMARY:Everything is not as it seems\, Jeanne Quinn
DESCRIPTION:Everything is not as it seems\nJeanne Quinn\nJANUARY 8 – FEBRUARY 5\, 2009 \n“In Richard Wagner’s 1849 essay “The Artwork of the Future\,” he presents the idea of the Gesamtkunstwerk: the complete work of art. I have always loved this idea of being able to create something sensually encompassing\, as Wagner attempted with his own work. The decorative arts\, referred to in German as Kunsthandwerk\, in some sense have always provided the possibility for the total work of art. The decorative arts are the arts of domestic space and they surround us completely: textiles\, wall coverings\, carpets\, furniture\, lighting\, vessels of all kinds\, and every other thing that covers a wall or ceiling or floor or that we use in everyday life.” \n“I like to think of my pieces as Gesamtkunsthandwerks\, in which I attempt to combine multiples that reference traditionally decorative objects into sensually encompassing installations. In the decorative arts of the past\, as well as contemporary installations\, the viewer becomes a participant in\, and actually enters in to the work of art. The Jane Hartsook Gallery at Greenwich House reads as a parlor space with its hardwood floors\, marble fireplace\, and tall windows. It provides a space to explore some of these ideas about the decorative arts\, bridging the gap between public exhibition space and domestic space. For my exhibition\, I have made a room-sized porcelain chandelier installation\, alluding to the history of the space as a parlor and the decorative objects found there\, but re-shaping these elements into a contemporary installation that references multiples\, materiality\, and the body.” -Jeanne Quinn\, 2008
URL:https://greenwichhouse.org/event/everything-is-not-as-it-seems-jeanne-quinn/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Pottery
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://greenwichhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/ex_everything9.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR