High Fire Culture: Locating Leach/Hamada in West Coast Studio Pottery
May 24 - Jul 6, 2013
Featuring work by Lari Robson, Sam Kwan, Andrew Wong, Ron Vallis, Cris Giuffrida, Heinz Laffin, Vincent Massey, Martin Peters, Hiro Urakami
HIGH FIRE CULTURE: Locating Leach/Hamada in West Coast Studio Pottery
May 24 - July 6, 2013
Opening Reception: Thursday, May 23 from 6 to 9 pm
Curator’s Talk with Nora Vaillant and Shelly Rosenblum: Saturday, May 25 at 4 pm
Satellite Gallery
560 Seymour Street, 2nd Floor
Vancouver, BC
info@satellitegallery.ca
www.satellitegallery.ca
This exhibition examines an artistic community linked by the aesthetic sensibilities and philosophy put forth by English potter Bernard Leach (1887-1979) and his Japanese colleague Shoji Hamada (1894-1978). The potters Lari Robson, Sam Kwan, Andrew Wong, Ron Vallis, Cris Giuffrida, Heinz Laffin, Vincent Massey, Martin Peters, and Hiro Urakami share this lineage. Inspired and influenced by the first generation of Canadian potters who apprenticed with Bernard Leach at his pottery in St. Ives, Cornwall, the West Coast artists in this exhibition articulate an historical period in which the imaginations of many young potters around the world were captured by the studio pottery movement.
The Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery’s 2004 Thrown exhibition and 2011 book by the same name focused on the Leach apprentices, John Reeve, Glenn Lewis, Michael Henry and Ian Steele, along with their well-known contemporaries Charmian Johnson, Wayne Ngan, and Tam Irving. When they returned to Vancouver from St. Ives beginning in 1961, the apprentices brought with them hands-on knowledge and experience that profoundly shaped the next generation of potters in this region. High Fire Culture provides an expanded view of the working relationships between potters in the wider ceramic community during this same time period of the 1960s and 1970s. It calls attention to the often collaborative nature of claywork, the sharing of practical knowledge from throwing techniques to glaze recipes, and the ways in which the subtleties of the craft are passed from one generation to another.
Many of the participants were students at the Vancouver School of Art during a particularly fruitful time, some of them taught at the art school during this period, some completed apprenticeships, many attended seminal workshops with those who had studied directly with Leach, others studied in Japan, and nearly all traveled to St. Ives making a pilgrimage of sorts to meet Leach himself. The work and careers of these artists have an international value because, although some of them no longer make pots, when they did they made them with an intensity, spirit and style that identifies them as members of the Leach legacy diaspora.
High Fire Culture is curated by Nora Vaillant and Shelly Rosenblum and is organized by the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery at the University of British Columbia, and Satellite Gallery, and made possible with funding from the Doris Shadbolt Endowment for the Arts, the Michael O'Brian Family Foundation, the Hamber Foundation and the North-West Ceramics Foundation.
Special Collection: Acquisitions and Archives
Jun 14 - Aug 18, 2013
Brings together recent gifts and purchases at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery
Title: Special Collection: Acquisitions and Archives at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery
Artists: Kate Craig, Julia Fryer, Mario Garcia Torres, Arthur Lismer, Attila Richard Lukacs, Nasreen Mohamedi, Takao Tanabe, et al.
Dates: June 14-August 18, 2013
Opening reception: Thursday, June 13, 8:00 – 10:00 pm
The exhibition Special Collection on view from June 14 through August 18, 2013 at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery brings together recent gifts and purchases that augment the strengths of the Gallery’s diverse holdings that include both artworks and an extensive archive of artist fonds, Fluxus material and Concrete Poetry.
The Belkin is home to British Columbia’s third largest public collection of art. During the past few years, the collection’s reputation has gained increased attention through the acquisition of important works by artists of regional, national, and international origin resulting in loans to museums such as the Vancouver Art Gallery, Art Gallery of Ontario, Brooklyn Art Museum and Los Angeles MOCA. Special Collection offers an opportunity to see for the first time a number of works that have recently entered the collection.
The exhibition will feature donations to the collection including Group of Seven member Arthur Lismer’s Little Lake, Georgian Bay (1950), a 1963 painting by Takao Tanabe, three large paintings by Attila Richard Lukacs, a selection of West Coast ceramics from the Estate of Doris Shadbolt and archival items from the Kate Craig fonds. Also included in the exhibition are purchases of works by younger Vancouver artists Raymond Boisjoly and Julia Feyrer, celebrated Indian artist Nasreen Mohamedi and I Promise Every Time (Blue Horizon, Vancouver), an important work by Mexican conceptual artist Mario Garcia Torres which was featured in the Belkin’s 2011 exhibition Material Witness: Mario Garcia Torres / Konrad Wendt. The purchase of the latter two works for the Gallery’s permanent collection was made possible by the generous support of the Belkin Curator’s Forum.
This exhibition is made possible with the generous support of the Canada Council for the Arts. We gratefully acknowledge the support of our Belkin Curator's Forum members.
For more information, contact Jana Tyner, t. 604.822.1389 / e. jana.tyner@ubc.ca