Sculpture

48 ep 48 COLLIDING WORLDS A Day inthe Life of John Toki 9 15 2013

PALM SPRINGS CA — September 12, 2013 – COLLIDING WORLDS, an ART DOCUMENTARY in a 30-minute format, brings A DAY IN THE LIFE OF JOHN TOKI — ARTIST-AUTHOR-EDUCATOR

John Toki was born in the San Francisco Bay Area to parents who endured the Internment Camps of World War II. His parents instilled in John a love for the rich Japanese tradition of ceramics. John took that to heart and embarked on a career in clay.

For over 35 years John Toki has worked in clay for over 35 years. He is an respected and award winning artist; a lecturer and professor; an inventor of kilns and other innovations in the ceramics field; co-author of several notable books on ceramic sculpture; the president and owner of Leslie Ceramic Supply Company in Berkeley, which his parents founded fifty years ago; and he a mentor and role model to many within and outside the ceramic sphere.

Toki speaks about the satisfaction of working with clay: "It can be used for large-scale works, as well as more intimate pieces, with equal success. You can apply color by painting, glazing or mixing it into the clay. It's a quiet activity that you can manipulate with only your hands, you don't need tools really. You can use it for representational works, as well as abstraction. And I really like the physical presence of clay."

While John is no strange to scale, it is his large-scale sculptures in clay and porcelain that show most clearly his artistic and technical skills. Sculpture reaching dazzling heights remain a timeless tribute to John's muses: nature (mountains, water, snow, sky) The pieces often hint to archaeological elements but are clearly contemporary in have a their technical complexity and resulting visual appeal.

John Toki continues to dazzle and amaze all who see his work. A living treasure, John's work has been shown in the US, the Netherlands and Japan. He has completed public commissions and installations in Richmond, Berkeley, Sacramento, San Francisco, Oakland, and Cincinnati.

Episode 2 – Tim Kowalczyk

In this episode, Tim Kowalzyk, aka timsceramics, aka "the cardboard guy” talks with host Ryan Reich about cardboard mugs, balancing parenthood/working at home, pro wrestling, movies on VHS and ceramics, amongst other topics.
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CLAY is a 4 letter word. A podcast about clay and life and art. A celebration of the process of ceramics and all the failures and life lessons learned through clay and fire. Candid conversations about ceramics, pottery, sculpture, art and life.
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Tim Kowalzyk
IG: @timsceramicss
web: timsceramics.com
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Ryan Reich
IG: @ryanreichceramics @clayisa4letterword
web: ryanreichceramics.com
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clayisa4letterword@gmail.com
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Audios:
C4 theme by Ryan Reich
Maggots by GWAR
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Videos:
WWE
Nothing But Trouble
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Images taken from google, and instagram

Montana Connections: Rudy Autio

The first video in a series of artist portraits inspired by the Missoula Art Museum Collections in MIssoula, Montana. Rudy Autio is best known for figurative ceramic vessels. He contributed generously and significantly to the world of ceramics. Curator Peter Held interviewed him at his home in 2007. The video was created after Rudy's death incorporating photos, footage of Rudy by his son, Chris Autio, and interview audio provided by MAM through Peter Held.

Many thanks to Rudy's wife, Lela, and family, MAM staff members Jenn Reifsneider and Renee Taffe, Peter Held, artist, educator and musician Beth Lo, the Archie Bray Foundation, Dexter Payne, John McFarland and the Big Sky Mudflaps.

Wayne Higby on the Alfred Ceramic Art Museum

www.craftinamerica.org. Wayne Higby, Director of the Alfred Ceramic Art Museum and Professor of Ceramic Art, on the Alfred Ceramic Art Museum. TEACHERS episode PBS Premiere: September 15, 2016 (*check local listings)

For more on Craft in America, visit www.craftinamerica.org.
All Craft in America programs are now viewable on www.craftinamerica.org, the PBS iPhone/iPad app and video.pbs.org/program/craft-in-america.
To purchase DVDs: www.shoppbs.org

“Clay Montana: Art in Place – Richard Notkin” (2016)

Features the work and words of Richard Notkin of Helena, Montana. From a series of films about the Montana clay community. Funded in-part by a Big Sky Grant from the Montana Film Office.

Filmmaker, Geoffrey Pepos
Producer, Cynthia Knutsen

Filmmaker web site –

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Meet The Artist: Richard Notkin

All rights reserved. ©2009 Museum of Glass
Visiting Artist Residency: Richard Notkin
Dates of the residency: August 12 – 16, 2009
All images courtesy of the artist.
Directed by Derek Klein
Museum of Glass Executive Director: J. Timothy Close
Museum of Glass Hot Shop Team: Benjamin Cobb, Gabe Feenan , Alex Stisser, and Sarah Gilbert

The Visiting Artist Residency program is sponsored by
the Courtyard by Marriott -Tacoma Downtown

Peter Voulkos, A Brief History

Peter Voulkos (1924-2002) was a ceramist most known for his abstract expressionist sculptures. He received his BS from the Montana State College, Bozeman and received his MFA from the California College of Arts and Crafts (now the California College of the Arts).

He taught at the Los Angeles County Art Institute (later renamed the Otis College of Art and Design) and the University of California, Berkeley. His students include Paul Soldner, Kenneth Price, Henry Takemoto, Michael Frimkess, John Mason, and others. His work can be found in the American Museum of Ceramic Art, Arkansas Arts Center, Everson Museum of Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and others.

www.craftinamerica.org. SERVICE episode Peter Voulkos segment. PBS premiere: November 2, 2014.

For more on Craft in America, visit www.craftinamerica.org.
All Craft in America programs are now viewable on www.craftinamerica.org, the PBS iPhone/iPad app and video.pbs.org/program/craft-in-america.
To purchase DVDs: www.shoppbs.org

Points of Departure: Haniwa

Points of Departure: Treasures of Japan from the Brooklyn Museum

March 7, 2014–June 8, 2014

"Haniwa"

Join Japan Society Gallery Director Miwako Tezuka as she guides viewers through time and space to explore Japanese art, culture, and history using works from Points of Departure: Treasures of Japan from the Brooklyn Museum as signposts along the way. For this journey you won't need a map, compass, or even a plane ticket! In this final installment, Dr. Tezuka examines two clay figurines known as haniwa. These two figures are almost 1,400 years old!

"A radically reorienting show…gives you a new way to navigate Japanese art." – The New York Times

Points of Departure: Treasures of Japan from the Brooklyn Museum is organized by Japan Society in collaboration with the Brooklyn Museum.

Music: "Takeda no Komoriuta" performed by Yoko Reikano Kimura and Hikaru Tamaki