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California Conference for the Advancement of Ceramic Arts CCACA 2016

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Date: 
Friday, 29 April 2016 to Sunday, 1 May 2016
Opening: 
Friday, 29 April 2016 - 7:00pm
James Tyler will create one of his legendary heads in hands-on demo

28th Annual California Conference for the Advancement of Ceramic Art (CCACA 2016)
April 29 – May 1, 2016
Davis, CA
Festival & Conference Dates: Friday, April 29, 2016: 9 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. (Opening reception 7 p.m. – 10 p.m.); Saturday, April 30: 8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.; Sunday, May 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.

CCACA brings the ultimate ceramic sculpture event to Davis, CA from April 29th – May 1st, 2016. In an intimate setting, you can interact with top artists in a way not possible at other venues. UC Davis, home to the late sculptor Robert Arneson, was instrumental in defining a new direction for ceramic art. Enjoy delightful downtown Davis and be inspired by nationally recognized ceramic art talents. 

With over 40 participating schools from throughout California, CCACA is one of the largest and most diverse ceramic events in Northern California. Demonstrations, lectures, student exhibitions—no other event delivers more inspired knowledge of ceramic sculpture for a better price. Meet face-to-face with distinguished ceramic sculptors you might only read about; see and hear from the artists what makes them top in their field. This is a chance to surround yourself with the top ceramic art and artists of today and the ideas of the artists of tomorrow.

Featured artists include Christa Assad, Clayton Bailey, Susan Beiner, Paul Mathieu, Beth Lo, Michael Lucero and James Tyler. Fresh from Burning Man, James Tyler will lead a demo of his colossal brick head installation. This year’s conference also features a public art component where participants are invited to participate in a hands-on calico cat mosaic demo. Join us and be a part of the biggest ceramic event of 2016!

“This is the kind educational, intellectual event one expects from museums or universities, but which public institutions seem less and less able to provide.” – ARTWEEK
For more information, how to register and a complete schedule of events visit http://natsoulas.com/ccaca-2016/

John Natsoulas Gallery
521 First Street, Davis, CA 95618
Press Contact: Nancy Resler art@natsoulas.com 530-756-3938
More information: http://natsoulas.com/

Artist ( Description ): 

Artists:

Christa Assad

 

 

 

 

 

Christa Assad

Based in the San Francisco Bay Area, mid-career artist Christa Assad is best known for her Re-objectification series — teapot designs based on objects and buildings from American industry. Assad explains the inspiration for her pieces: Growing up in Pittsburgh, PA, I was strongly influenced by the Steel City’s dying industry and the grit of these oft-abandoned sites. Tagged with graffiti and other remnants of trespassers and squatters, the physical remains of these sites serve as archaeological artifacts in the study of human behavior and societal evolution.

A teacher, traveler and full time ceramicist with an MFA from Indiana University, Assad’s work is in the permanent collections of The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, The Ceramic Research Center at Arizona State University Museum, and The Penn State Fulbright Scholar Collection. She was named, “Ceramic Artist of the Year,” in 2012 by Ceramics Monthly. Assad is represented by Abmeyer + Wood Fine Art (WA), Ferrin Contemporary (MA), and Harvey Meadows Gallery (CO).

 

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Clayton Bailey

Clayton Bailey received a B.S. Degree in Art Education in January 1961, and continued at the University of Wisconsin graduate program in ceramics /sculpture. Harvey Littleton hired him as studio technician and ceramics instructor. In 1962 Bailey received an M.S. Degree in Art and Art Education. He attended the Toledo Museum of Art Glassblowing Seminars with Harvey Littleton as a scholarship student. In 1963 Bailey built a glass furnace and annealing kiln. Bailey moved from glassblowing to ceramics, inspired by the abstract expressionist work of Peter Voulkos. Bailey was a visiting artist at U.C. Davis in 1967 and moved to Northern California permanently in 1968. In 1970 he started teaching at California State University-East Bay and is now Professor Emeritus. His ceramic and mixed media robots and sculptures are highly indicative of the quirky and robust sense of intelligent humor that pervades his work.

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Susan Beiner

Susan Beiner received her MFA from the University of Michigan in 1993 and BFA from Rutgers University in New Jersey in 1985. Currently, she teaches ceramics in the Herberger School of Design and the Arts at Arizona State University. She has exhibited both nationally and internationally and has received several awards and residencies. Beiner’s ceramic work has been exhibited at The Mint Museum of Craft and Design in North Carolina, the Limogues Foundation, Bernardaud, France, Princessehof Keramiekmuseum in the Netherlands, Wustum Museum of Fine Art in Wisconsin, San Francisco Museum of Fine Arts, as well as numerous galleries and universities around the country.

 

Paul Mathieu

 

 

 

 

 

Paul Mathieu

Paul Mathieu has been a student of ceramics since 1972, in Montreal, Calgary, Stoke-on-Trent in England, and San Francisco and Los Angeles in the USA, where he received a Master of Fine Art degree (MFA) from UCLA in 1987. He has taught ceramics since 1976 in Montreal at the college and university levels, but also in Mexico and in Paris at the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux-Arts. Since 1996, he has been teaching in Vancouver in the Faculty of Visual and Material Culture at the Emily Carr University.

His work has been shown internationally in numerous important exhibitions, among them Mino, Japan in 1992, 1994 and 2002, and in Korea, Taiwan, Italy, England, Australia and all over the USA and Canada. He has received numerous prizes, including the “Grand Prix des Metiers d’Art” in 1985, the Chalmers Award in Crafts in 2000 and the Sadye Bronfman Award for Excellence in Crafts and the Governor General Award in Visual Arts in 2007. His work has been exhibited in 21 individual exhibitions since 1978, in various cities in Canada (Montreal, Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver) and the USA (New-York, Los Angeles, Chicago).

Beth Lo

 

 

 

 

Beth Lo

Beth Lo was born in Lafayette, Indiana, to parents who had recently immigrated from China. She studied Art under Rudy Autio and assumed his job as  Professor of Ceramics  at The University of Montana-Missoula’s  School of Art  when he retired in 1985. She has exhibited her work internationally, and has received numerous awards including The University of Montana Provost’s Distinguished Lecturer Award in 2006, a National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artist Fellowship Grant in 1994, the Montana Arts Council Individual Artist Fellowship in 1989, and an American Craft Museum Design Award in 1986.

 

Lucero

 Michael Lucero

Born in Tracy, California, he earned a BA degree from Humboldt State University in 1975. In 1978, he earned an MFA at the University of Washington in Seattle. Soon after, he settled in New York when Minimalism was dominant in the art scene. Some of his work such as “Lizard Slayer,” reflects that movement. He taught briefly at New York University and the Parsons School of Design. In the late 1980s, he turned from polychrome clay to cast metal and then began to incorporate both mediums. Generally he sees his work as “reverence for high art, affection for folk art, nostalgia for nature, and curiousity about other cultures.”

 

Tyler

James Tyler

James Tyler is famous for his colossal Brickhead installations that are influenced by some of the world’s great ceramic heritages and reminiscent of the temple carvings of Angkor Wat or the great Toltec heads of Central America. While the heads of these cultures often symbolized their connections with the spirits they worshipped, Tyler chooses to represent all of humanity with his heads, outside of cultural considerations — they are meant to represent “everyman” and “everywoman.”

Telephone: 
530-756-3938
Venue ( Address ): 

John Natsoulas Gallery
521 First Street, Davis, CA 95618
Press Contact: Nancy Resler art@natsoulas.com 530-756-3938
More information: http://natsoulas.com/

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