KIDS IN CLAY CLASSES!!!

For all those Bryson City parents – I have finally

scheduled some kids classes for this Fall!

 

Face mugs from Fall 2010

Last year's face mugs!

Halloween Face Mugs and More!

Ages 8 and up are welcome to make fun Halloween decorations in clay including a face mug!

Saturday, October 1 10 AM – Noon

$35 per person (discounts apply towards siblings)

Includes clay, glaze, firing, etc. Pieces will be ready to pick up 2 weeks after class.

 

Laura's Angel

Clay angel by Laura

Christmas Gifts Galore!

 

Ages 8 and up are welcome to come play with clay and make gifts for friends and family.

2 Sessions Available:

Wednesday after school: Nov. 2, 9, 16, 30 3:30-5:00

OR

Saturdays: November 12, 19 and December 3 & 10 10 AM – 11:30

$90 per person (discounts apply towards siblings)

Includes everything needed to make handmade gifts in clay!

Pieces will be ready to pick up December 18th.

CALL TO REGISTER! Limited class size.

Pincu Pottery

80 Hwy. 28 South, Bryson City

488-0480

 

Charitable Giving – Donating to a cause

This week I want to talk a little about giving. (In the past I blogged about donating to fund raisers – and the need never subsides….

Potters tend to be a pretty giving crowd.  Visit any pottery group’s online site and you are bound to find glaze recipes, helpful hints, food recipes, how to’s, you name it.  I have, on several occasions, emailed a potter I admire to ask for a recipe or how they accomplished a wonderful, mysterious technique.   They have all responded openly.

Not only do potters share pottery techniques and ideas, however, they also share themselves and their work to help a cause they believe in by donating to charities.

Twenty years ago a couple of potters thought it would be a great idea to make a bunch of bowls and use them to raise money to help feed the hungry (Statistics show that 1 out of 8 Americans struggle with food insecurity every day).  Since then, potters throughout the country have been participating in Empty Bowls projects to help the hungry in their local areas.  I have known about this national fundraiser for a long time; however I had never learned the history of the project until the latest issue of Studio Potter Magazine, one of the best pottery mags on the market, where there is an article all about the history of Empty Bowls.

This past weekend the John C. Campbell Folk School held their annual Empty Bowls fundraiser. I imagine it was a HUGE success with all the local talent they have to make bowls! Coming to Sylva, NC on April 22, the Community Table will be hosting their Empty Bowls event. Amy Grimes has asked that I contribute and OF COURSE I WILL! I also intend to ask students at Southwestern Community College to add to the lot. The more the merrier! More bowls to sell, more money raised, less hunger in our community!

Ayumi Horie, a world-renowned potter, has organized several auctions to raise money, including one to help fund the Obama campaign; and now she is working on a new auction to help those devastated in the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. In just one week, she has been able to find enough fabulous artwork donated to help our friends in Japan!

I am certain there are many, many more potters and other artists out there donating their hard work to causes they believe in. To keep me from going on and on with links and words, let me ask that you, reader, look around and see what help is needed around you and donate to a cause – whether it be by a monetary donation, volunteerism or by buying a fabulous piece of artwork at a fund raiser auction.

To make it easy for you:
If you live near Sylva, NC, come out to the Community Table’s Empty Bowls event and have a great dinner to help get a great dinner to hungry folks in our community – April 22, from 4 to 8 PM.

Head over to Ayumi Horie’s website to get more information about how you can buy a LOVELY POT and know that your money will help victims of the earthquake in Japan! You can be anywhere in the world and participate in this online auction that will go live on Friday, March 18th and continue through to Sunday, March 20th at 9 pm EST

Go to the Empty Bowls Events page and find an event near you. Donate some fab bowls, motivate students to make bowls for the event and/or attend the event for some food and fabulous bowls to take home!

Thomas Winter Photograph of Empty Bowls

Thomas Winter Photograph of Empty Bowls. Source: Marilyn Bauer, http://blogs.tcpalm.com

Clay Guild in Western North Carolina

Tonight is the second meeting of the up-and-coming clay guild for Western North Carolina (WNC) -West of Asheville including Haywood, Jackson, Swain, Macon, Clay and Cherokee counties. We will meet at 6:30 PM at Southwestern Community College in Bryson City. Of course it will be a Pot Luck and full of fabulous food. We will all bring our place settings to show off our pottery and keep the throw-aways to a minimum.

We are hoping to organize enough interested folk and raise some money to help market the area as a place to visit and purchase fabulous clay art and/or a place to learn how to play with clay. Handmade in America calls this a ‘Creative Economy’ and could help boost WNC’s economy! Judi Jetson, Director of Creative Economies for Handmade states, “Current research says the way to win in rural economic development is with a 3-way combination of outdoor amenities, creative professionals and entrepreneurship. This Rural Growth Trifecta is the key to our economic recovery.”

Hank Shuler, one of the organizers of this guild, wrote a wonderful press release for this meeting that points out within the 6 counties West of Asheville there are 5 established schools for learning to make pottery, along with a number of established clay artists and up-and-coming artists that are studying at these 5 institutions: John C. Campbell Folk School, Southwestern Community College’s Heritage Arts Program, Haywood Community College’s Professional Crafts, Western Carolina University, and the Bascom.

I would love for this group to market through an annual Drive-About where studios are open to the public for a weekend festival of buying and browsing the wonderful clay art around the area. I imagine it would be similar to the Minnesota Pottery Studio Sale and Tour in the Upper St. Croix River area or the Art of the Pot in Austin, Texas, or any number of similar tours.

Another group of clay folks that I envy and would love for our group to emulate is the NC Clay Club. These folks meet monthly at various members’ studios and talk clay, eat together, host workshops, etc. They even have a blog that keeps all members and the public informed of the wonderful things going on. This club is located in and around the Asheville-Penland area, an incredibly clay-art dense geographic area. I hope our far western NC area can grow to be similar to this clay-collector destination!

Speaking of workshops….. though we haven’t officially established this guild (until tonight!) we have had opportunities to raise money to bring visiting artists to Southwestern Community College. The SCC students have participated in various art sales, including the WNC Pottery Festival and our own Mountain Shapes and Colors show; and while selling their wares, they have donated a percentage of sales to the ‘guild’. We hope to continue this on a larger scale in order to bring clay artists from around the country to offer workshops in our area. This small coffer allowed us to host Rob Withrow and Ted Cooley last week during the Face Jug workshop.

So come out and support this new clay guild! Help spread the word that there is FABULOUS CLAY ART WEST OF ASHEVILLE!!!!

If you have any thoughts on the guild – whether it be ideas for it or people to contact, etc., please leave a comment!