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In this issue...
  • Publisher Announced for 20th Century American Studio Crafts

  • Architectural Echoes in Clay Exhibit

  • Nina Hole Residency

  • New CCCD Staff greets Gallery visitors

  • Shaping the Future of Craft , 2006 National Leadership Conference


  • CENTER FOR CRAFT CREATIVITY DESIGN ENEWS October 2006

    Greetings!

    The Center for Craft, Creativity and Design (CCCD) has launched ENEWS to keep you current with all our programs, exhibits and events. ENEWS will be sent out monthly with most news linking to more lengthy information found on our website www.craftcreativitydesign.org. Announcements cards will still be mailed for upcoming exhibits and talks. If you are on our mailing list to receive an announcement card for exhibits and would prefer to receive the information through ENEWS, please let us know and it will save us a stamp!


    Dian Magie, Executive Director

    Publisher Announced for 20th Century American Studio Crafts

    The University of North Carolina Press has been selected as the publisher of the first comprehensive history of twentieth century contemporary studio crafts in the United States. The book will serve as a reference and an undergraduate crafts history text. It has been a priority project of the Center for Craft, Creativity, and Design, a regional center of the University of North Carolina, since a Center-sponsored retreat of national craft leaders recommended commissioning such a work in 2002. The retreat participants concluded that this would be the most important venture the Center could undertake in its mission to support and advance craft. The co-authors--Janet Koplos, senior editor of Art in America, and author and jeweler Bruce Metcalf--began research in 2004 and are near completion of the text.

    This book, the first to encompass the field as a whole and chart the rapid changes and developments of the modern period, will focus on studio crafts and their steady trajectory from the workshops of the Arts & Crafts Movement into art schools, galleries, and museums. Following a decade-by-decade structure, the book will offer a full discussion of aesthetics. It will also introduce and explain sociopolitical and stylistic changes in crafts over the course of the century as well as such related matters as government support, education, and publications.

    The book will be suitable for use in a typical one-semester college course. Written accessibly, in clear and vivid language, it will contain approximately 500 images. The authors are grounding the work in the social context of craft practice. The main focus will be the objects and the makers themselves. The goal of the book is to engage readers, raise important issues, foster critical understanding, and place crafts in a broader context.

    The University of North Carolina Press provided the Center with a comprehensive publishing proposal, including a detailed marketing plan. The Press and the Center are committed to keeping the work in print as long as possible in an effort to support colleges and universities that will, over time, be adding crafts history courses to their curriculum.

    Serious scholarship in United States crafts history and criticism is also the focus of two other publications projected for release by the University of North Carolina Press in 2008. TOWARD A PHILOSOPHY OF CRAFT: REMARKS ON THE THEORETICAL AND AESTHETIC NATURE OF A DISCIPLINE by Howard Risatti, professor emeritus of art history at Virginia Commonwealth University, answers the question, “What is a craft object?” Risatti bases his discussion on the premise that function is an important, if not essential, defining aspect of craft and that function continues to play a fundamental role in craft, even in contemporary studio craft. CHOOSING CRAFT: A HISTORY IN ARTISTS’ WORDS, edited by Diane Douglas, director of the Center for Liberal Arts at Bellevue Community College, and Vicki Halper, a curator and writer specializing in crafts of the United States and modern art of the Pacific Northwest, will be the first sourcebook of the words and writings of artists working in the studio crafts in the United States between 1945 and 2000. Topics to be covered include finding a medium, getting an education, and making a living. The editors also have gathered observations from craftspeople on such matters as defining the field, confronting tradition, and critiquing culture.

    The University of North Carolina Press has a special interest in the history and practice of craft, which is unsurprising in a state where craft traditions date back more than a century and where so many contemporary craft artists choose to live and work.


    Architectural Echoes in Clay Exhibit

    through November 10

    The exhibit, curated by Brevard wood fire potter Judith Duff, has garnered international media recognition. The exhibit is divided between two sites, the CCCD gallery and the Katherine Smith Gallery at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina, and includes work of the most acclaimed wood fire artists in the U.S. and Canada. The artists were selected for their approach to design complimenting the September residency by Danish clay artist Nina Hole. Clay Times September-October issue devoted two full pages to the exhibit. The CCCD Gallery in Hendersonville is open, free to the public, Tuesday through Saturday, 1-5pm.

    Directions to CCCD. The Catherine J. Smith Gallery, 733 Rivers Street, is open free to the public Monday through Friday, 10am-5pm.

    The full catalog for the current exhibit is now available online with essays by Judith Duff and Susan Lefler. Hard copies of the catalog can be ordered from CCCD, PO Box 1127, Hendersonville, NC 28791 for $5 each.

    Order catalogue

    Nina Hole Residency

    The second international residency sponsored by CCCD was an astounding success if you ask the over 1000 who attended the final “unveiling” in Boone, NC of the Fire Sculpture created by Danish clay artists Nina Hole, her assistant Ann-Charlotte Ohlsson and three teams of faculty and students. A short slideshow of the 17 day residency is now online. A CD is being created with images from the over 800 taken each day of the residency by photographer Rebecca Long. The CD will be an educational tool for workshops and classes in wood fire ceramics. There will be four components of the CD: 1) the creation and firing with wood of the 14 foot high “Two Taarn” sculpture in the Nina Hole residency; 2) artists and wood fire work in the Architectural Echoes in Clay exhibit; 3) images of kilns used in wood firing; and 4) wood fire work by the many western North Carolina ceramic wood fire artists.

    Slide show of the residency

    New CCCD Staff greets Gallery visitors

    Theresa (Terri) Gibson joins the CCCD staff October 16th in the position of Accounting Clerk/receptionist. Terri lives in Rugby Highlands, across the road from the Kellogg and Craft Centers, and claims one of the reason she and her husband bought their home was to be so close to the Craft Center exhibitions (Terri works in fused glass) and the Rudnick Nature and Public Art Trail. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 1-5pm and Terri will greet all visitors with knowledge of the current and upcoming exhibits and directions on how to find the “bell” public art on the trail.


    Shaping the Future of Craft , 2006 National Leadership Conference

    CCCD Director Dian Magie, and board members wood sculpture Stoney Lamar, The Furniture Society director Andrew Glasgow, and Penland School of Crafts Director Jean McLaughlin, were invited and will be attending this important national conference of the American Craft Council, taking place in Houston, Texas, October 19-21. Internationally recognized sculptor Martin Puryear is the keynote speaker with sessions on New Artists, Craft in Museums, and Scholarship and Critical Writing.

    Web Links
  • Center for Craft Creativity Design
  • About Us
    The Center for Craft, Creativity and Design is an inter-institutional Center of the University of North Carolina.

    The mission of the regional UNC Center is to support and advance craft, creativity and design in education and research, and, through community collaborations, to demonstrate ways that craft and design provide creative solutions to community issues. The mission of the nonprofit CCCD is to support the mission of the UNC center through funding, programs, and outreach to artists, craft organizations, schools in the community, region and nation.

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