Demonstrating Artist: Michelle Ettrick
ABOUT
2022 NCECA Annual Conference
Fertile Ground
The annual conference of the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) provides opportunities to foster professional networks and experience lifelong learning with friends, colleagues, mentors, and students.
Fertile Ground invites us to gather around an expansive and inclusive table for sustenance and dialogue through ceramic art, teaching, and learning. Sacramento, California will be the hub for all things clay during the 2022 NCECA conference! This hybrid event will incorporate in-person and remote participation including lectures, demonstrations and networking opportunities.
NCECA is working with care to produce a 2022 conference in alignment with California Department of Health guidelines. All who register for in-person programming are required to share proof of vaccination or a negative Covid-19 test result produced just prior to the event.
To stay informed on all upcoming news and information about the 2022 Conference events and programming please follow us across all our social media channels at:
Fertile Ground, NCECA’s 56th annual conference.
Poet and activist Gary Snyder writes, “The great Central Valley region does not prefer English over Spanish or Japanese or Hmong. If it had any preferences at all, it might best like the languages it has heard for thousands of years, such as Maidu or Miwok, simply because it is used to them. Mythically speaking, it will welcome whoever chooses to observe the etiquette, express the gratitude, grasp the tools, and learn the songs that it takes to live there.”
Migrants to the region bearing cultural practices from all over the world have cultivated the rich evolution of Northern California’s arts and agriculture. Intermingling diverse traditions with innovations, expression in ceramic art has taken many forms: vessel, sculpture, architecture, and installation. Northern California is celebrated both for the emergence of unconventional clay practices and sustaining traditions. Enduring influences of Native wisdoms and vibrant multiculturalism are essential to the region’s contemporary context of ecologically and socially engaged creative practices.
The Farm to Fork Movement, which originated in Northern California, demonstrates how significant impact can occur when stewardship of the environment fully integrates cultural practice that is equally attentive to traditions and innovation. The territory of the Central Valley and Northern California are threaded with clay caches, rivers, coastline, and mountain ranges. These features are expressive of the natural environment that reflect a sense of awe and spirit of interconnectedness between the land and its people.
Demonstrating Artist: Virgil Ortiz
George Rodriguez
Born and raised in the border city of El Paso, Texas, George Rodriguez creates humorous decorative ceramic sculpture, addressing his identity and community. He earned a BFA from the University of Texas El Paso and an MFA from the University of Washington. Rodriguez is represented by Foster/White Gallery in Seattle.
Jen Allen
Jen Allen is a studio potter, mother, and educator in Morgantown, West Virginia. She earned her BFA from the University of Alaska, Anchorage; and her MFA from Indiana University, Bloomington.
Michelle Ettrick
Michelle Ettrick was a non-English speaking 13-year old when she arrived in the United States in 1982. Life in Brooklyn, New York, was a stark contrast to her early memories of Panama. “As an Afro-Latina, I struggled to find a community that would accept me and where I felt I belonged. Clay is very personal material to me. I stretch, pull, pinch and form shapes where I leave evidence of my having been there. I follow up by drawing on my work, embracing my natural curly hair, heritage, womanhood, and at times current worldly struggles. My artwork is a record of my experiences as an Afro-Latina American.”
Virgil Ortiz
Virgil Ortiz is one of the most avant-garde artists of his time. With a career spanning four decades, Ortiz’s artistry extends across various media and boundaries—challenging societal expectations and breaking taboos. His vision fuses his Pueblo culture with sci-fi, fantasy, and apocalyptic themes, yielding imagery that is both provocative and futuristic.
Adam Chau
Adam Chau is an artist in Cold Spring, New York. A graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, his research blends digital manufacturing with traditional studio techniques. In 2018, he received the NCECA Emerging Artist Award and in 2019 he became a member of the International Academy of Ceramics.
Alex Reed
Alex Reed earned his BFA from Alfred University. Alex’s work spans independent studio projects and design for industry, including Rookwood Pottery and Heath Ceramics. Alex’s work has been exhibited at the MAK Center, The Craft Contemporary, The Future Perfect, AMOCA, The Neutra VDL House, and Marta.
Ai Hong Wang
Ai Hong Wang is a Professor in Design at Jingdezhen Ceramic Institute, School of Art and Design in China. She has broad experience in design and has published widely in design-related subjects. Her publications include The High Computer Technology Application Study about the Daily-use Ceramic Products Design (2014).
Akiko Jackson
Akiko Jackson is from Kahuku, Hawaii, a rural north-shore community on the island of O'ahu. She holds an MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University and is an artist in residence at the Clay Studio, Philadelphia. Exhibitions include the 4th World Ceramic Biennale Korea in Icheon.
Alisa Clausen
Alisa Liskin Clausen has been living in Denmark since the late 1990s. Her focus is on Cone 6 oxidation glazes, free sharing of information, and dedication to onward research.
Amy Gogarty
Amy Gogarty earned her MFA in 1990. She taught in Liberal Studies at the Alberta College of Art + Design in Calgary prior to relocating to Vancouver, where she works as an independent writer and artist. She is the author of more than 100 critical essays, reviews or presentations relating to visual art and craft practice.
Amy Snider
Amy Snider is an MFA candidate at the University of Regina, Canada. Her conceptual sculptures and installations represent the effects of climate change. Current work includes a series of ephemeral cups, bowls, and plates that represent melting glaciers and drought as they dissolve, crumble, and blow away.
Anna Calluori Holcombe
Anna Calluori Holcombe is professor emerita in Ceramics at the School of Art and Art History at the University of Florida. Calluori Holcombe has vast international experience in ceramic art, education, and research in various capacities, alongside a number of publications.
Ashley Rowley
Ashley Rowley earned her BA in Studio Arts, emphasizing in Sculpture, from Azusa Pacific University, California, in 2015. She went on to teach visual arts in a K–12 classroom setting for four years before taking the job as the Education Manager at the American Museum of Ceramic Arts in 2018.
Asmaa El-Essealy
Asmaa Mohammed Ebraheem El-Essealy is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Art Education, and Faculty of Specific Education at the University of Tanta, Egypt. She is a member of Designers Syndicate–Ergonomic Design; and a member of the Intellectual Property Association of the Arab League Member of the Arab Society for Islamic Civilization and Arts.
Bryan Cera
Bryan Cera is an artist, designer and maker whose practice investigates information and data’s reciprocal relationships to matter and ideas. His studio explorations traverse creative coding, computational design, kinetic sculpture, and experimental platforms for digital fabrication. In 2016, he founded the Thing Tank - a laboratory dedicated to tinkering, rapid prototyping and research in object design and digital fabrication. He currently serves as Assistant Professor of Object Making and Emergent Technologies at the Alberta University of the Arts.
Dr. Billie Sessions
Dr. Billie Sessions is Professor Emerita of Art at CSUSB. Her Marguerite Wildenhain Ripples exhibition traveled from Southern California to Utah State University, and Alfred University. She was Project Director and author in Common Ground: Ceramics in Southern California 1945–1975. Sessions has received Fulbright, NEA, NEH, and Getty grants.
Dr. Bonnie Kemske
Dr. Bonnie Kemske is a ceramic artist and writer. She publishes in the academic and non-academic press, and was Editor of Ceramic Review from 2010–2013. Her books include Kintsugi: The Poetic Mend and The Teabowl: East and West, both of which draw on her experience as a Japanese tea ceremony practitioner.
Brian Kohl
Brian Kohl is a ceramic artist and Assistant Professor of Ceramics at Riverside City College in Southern California. In the summers he works as a whitewater rafting guide currently on the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in Idaho. As an undergraduate, Kohl became aware of water issues in the west through a letter writing campaign for the Wilderness Heritage Act in California to designate 246 rivers in the state as Wild and Scenic. It was this catalyst that led him to research art as activism and paved the path to creating installations dealing with the number of dams in various states across the country. His work includes imagery from hydro-electric projects, pipes, and water fixtures juxtaposed against landscapes and the natural world.
Brian Harper
Brian Harper is an Associate Professor of Fine Art at Indiana University Southeast and the Founder and Executive Director of Artaxis. He holds a BFA from Northern Arizona University and an MA and MFA from the University of Iowa. His work has been exhibited in more than 100 national and international exhibitions.
Brooke Armstrong
Brooke Armstrong is an emerging ceramic sculptor residing in Missoula, Montana. She graduated from the University of Montana with an MFA, and she is excited to offer tips and tricks to students on how to make the most of their graduate school experience.
Bryan Hopkins
Bryan Hopkins is a studio potter working in porcelain, and lives in Buffalo, New York. He was a mathematics major in college, and earned an MFA in Ceramics from SUNY at New Paltz. Bryan’s personal research in the field of ceramics centers on the vessel—both utilitarian and sculptural.
Camila Friedman-Gerlicz
Camila Friedman-Gerlicz is an artist and educator currently living and working in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She incorporates her love of math into her artistic work by making functional and sculptural work that explores mathematical concepts and objects.
Carly Slade
Carly Slade grew up in "Big Sky" Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Her work is influenced by her blue-collar roots, and plagued by a concern for the precarious nature of the working class. Using a mix of materials, Slade creates dioramas of real places in an unreal perspective.
Chanakarn Semachai
Chanakarn Semachai (Punch) was born and raised in Bangkok, Thailand. She graduated in 2012 with her BA in Thailand and earned an MFA degree from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania in 2019. She focuses on issues of identity and multiculturalism in her artwork. Currently, she teaches ceramics at Chulalongkorn University, Thailand.
Che Ochtli
Che Ochtli began working in clay three years ago, and is interested in connecting to the earth and a forgotten ancestral past. Historically his work has been rooted in medical advocacy, equity, diversity, and inclusion as well as data analysis and visualization. He was drawn to the Green Task Force to learn how to create more sustainable ceramic practices that honor the land, his roots, and community. He is currently exploring ceramics as a narrative to tell stories with the goal of exploring the intersection of art, culture, and green practices to create a community that is inclusive and accessible.
Claudia Alvarez
Claudia Alvarez is based in New York City. She earned an MFA from California College of Arts and BA from University of California, Davis. She currently teaches at New York University and Pratt Institute. Grants include Art Matters, McKnight Foundation, Bemis X, Northern Clay Center, SOMA Mexico City.
Cory Brown
Cory Brown is a ceramic artist and an Industrial Designer of Glazes for AMACO. He lives and works in Alfred, New York.
Careen Stoll
Careen Stoll traveled globally and in the self. She learned pottery from Linda Christianson, John Neely, and Silvie Granatelli. There she grew the ethics of studio practice and ecological effect that informed construction of the innovative Tin Man kiln in Portland, Oregon. She now integrates permaculture and pottery practice on her land.
Courtney M. Leonard
Courtney M. Leonard is a Shinnecock artist and filmmaker who explores marine biology, Indigenous food sovereignty, migration, and human environmental impact. In Leonard’s current projects, she articulates the multiple definitions of the term breach and investigates and documents Indigenous communities’ historical ties to water, marine life, and native cultures of subsistence.
Del Harrow
Del Harrow lives and works in Fort Collins, Colorado, with his wife, potter Sanam Emami and their son, William. He is a Professor at Colorado State University where he teaches Sculpture, Digital Fabrication, and Ceramics. His art practice spans genres of sculpture and design, and integrates traditional manual and skill based forming processes with digital fabrication technology. Harrow was a recipient of a 2020 United States Artist Fellowship.
Dwayne Sackey
Dwayne Sackey earned his BFA from Oregon College of Art and Craft in 2019. Merit-based scholarships supported him: Gregori Jakovina & Larry McDonald Scholarship, Ellice T. Johnston Scholarship, and OCAC Community College Scholarship. In 2019, Sackey showed at the Multnomah County Justice Center, and in 2021 he showed at the governor’s mansion. Sackey received the 2021 Studio Potter Grant for Apprenticeship, apprenticing under Chris Baskin.
Daniel Dallabrida
Daniel Dallabrida is a conceptual ceramicist. Un bel bugiardo. Survivor. He completed a Post-Bacc at SACI, Florence (2008), Italy, and an MFA at the California College of the Arts (2011). He has completed residencies at Anderson Ranch Arts Center, Singapore’s LASALLE College of the Arts, Fondazione Pistoletto, and Kala Art Institute. Presentations include Milan, Rome, Florence, Oakland, Singapore, Kansas City, Aspen, San Francisco. He lives with a partner in San Francisco and Tuscany.
Danielle O’Malley
Danielle O’Malley is a sculptor in Helena, Montana. She earned her MFA from University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, and her BFA from Plymouth State University. She has attended residencies at: the Red Lodge Clay Center, the Paris Gibson Square, and Watershed. Her work is in permanent collections at the Northwest Art Gallery (North Dakota) and the Taoxichuan Art Center (Jingdezhen, China).
Danielle Ruggiero
Danielle Ruggiero is a ceramic artist and teacher working in Massachusetts. She earned her MS in Art Education in 2017, and her BFA from Syracuse University in Sculpture and Art Education in 2014. She has taught K–12 Art at several public schools for the past eight years.
Dolores Huerta
Dolores Huerta is Founder & President of the Dolores Huerta Foundation. She co-founded the United Farm Workers of America with Cesar Chavez.
Ehren Tool
Ehren Tool is a Marine Corps Veteran of the 1991 Gulf War. Tool has made and given away more than 23,000 cups since 2001. Tool earned his BFA at the University of Southern California in 2000, his MFA at the University of California (UC), Berkeley, in 2005. Tool is the Laboratory Mechanician in the Department of Art Practice at UC Berkeley.
Ellen Kleckner
Ellen Kleckner is an artist and educator based in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Her artistic practice weaves together community engagement, material investigation, and collaboration. Ellen studied Ceramics at the Appalachian Center for Craft (BFA) and Ohio University (MFA). Ellen is the Executive Director of the Iowa Ceramics Center and Glass Studio, a non-profit community art center.
Eliza Au
Eliza Au is originally from Vancouver, British Columbia in Canada. She earned her BFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design and her MFA from Alfred University. In 2021, she was awarded a McKnight Fellowship from the Northern Clay Center. Au is currently an Assistant Professor of Ceramics at the University of North Texas.
Evelyn LaChapelle
Evelyn LaChapelle is an experienced events coordinator and community liaison, who is now utilizing her professional position within the legal cannabis industry to advocate for restorative justice. She is a program associate at Last Prisoner Project, dedicated to redressing the past and continuing harms caused by the war on cannabis.
George Rodriguez
Demonstrating Artist
Born and raised in the border city of El Paso, Texas, George Rodriguez creates humorous decorative ceramic sculpture, addressing his identity and community. He earned a BFA from the University of Texas El Paso and an MFA from the University of Washington. Rodriguez is represented by Foster/White Gallery in Seattle.
Gina Brownstein
Gina Brownstein is a ceramic artist and educator who has taught in the Los Angeles County public school system for 22 years. She holds a BA in Studio Art from Scripps College, Teaching Credential in Art from CSU Los Angeles, CTE Credential in Ceramics, and an MA in Multicultural Education from National University.
gwendolyn yoppolo
A passionate educator, writer, and researcher as well as a maker, gwendolyn yoppolo is currently serving as Associate Professor of Ceramics at Kutztown University. She has earned an MFA in Ceramics from Pennsylvania State University, an MA in Education from Columbia University, and a BA in Sociology from Haverford College. Her current areas of raw materials research investigates phase separation in Cone 6 glazes as well as colored porcelain clay bodies.
Hideo Mabuchi
Hideo Mabuchi teaches and conducts research as a Professor of Applied Physics at Stanford University. In the studio he focuses on thrown-and-altered vessel forms for atmospheric firings. He is working on new teaching approaches that integrate ceramics with scientific and humanistic studies to bring craft into the core of liberal undergraduate education.
Hitomi Shibata
Hitomi Shibata is a Japanese artist who focuses on wood-fired ceramics, and makes functional and sculptural ceramics in Seagrove, North Carolina. She holds BEd in Ceramic Art and an MEd in Fine Arts, Ceramics from Okayama University, Japan. She received a Rotary Scholarship and studied at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth. She is a member of the International Academy of Ceramics.
Link Henderson
Link Henderson is the owner of Kentucky Mudworks. KY Mudworks manufactures over 20 different clay bodies in house, produces our own line of glazes, and makes Dirty Girls pottery tools along with Groovy Tools. Over the years we've helped build a robust community of ceramic artists, enthusiasts, and businesses.
Io Palmer
Io Palmer was featured in several exhibitions including the Dakar Biennial, Senegal; Rush Gallery, New York City, and the Boise Art Museum. She received a Fulbright Grant to India in 2019. Io holds degrees from the University of Arizona, Tucson; and Tyler School of Art, Philadelphia. She is a professor at Washington State University.
Irma Bijou
Irma Bijou is an American artist and a visual arts educator based in California, where she has resided for more than three decades. She has dedicated herself to the study and research of ceramics, teaching, and creating custom designed art programs, most of them in combination with information and tools to create environmental awareness and ecological sustainability while working with clay. She has exhibited nationally and internationally, and her works are part of national and international collections.
Ianna Frisby
Ianna Frisby is a Sacramento artist and art professor who works in Sacramento and maintains a studio at Verge Center for the Arts. She received her BFA from Humboldt State University in 1998 and her MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art in 2005.
Jasmine Baetz
Jasmine Baetz is an artist, activist, and educator who works with clay. While working towards her MFA at CU Boulder she led the project to make a commemorative, community-created sculpture for Los Seis de Boulder, the six Chicanx student activists who were killed in 1974.
Jihye Han
Jihye Han earned a BFA in sculpture and ceramics from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and an MFA in ceramics from the University of North Texas. She was the recipient of the NCECA Graduate Student Fellowship and the award winner for ClayHouston’s Texas BIPOC Ceramic Emerging Artist in 2021.
Jane Rekedal
Jane Rekedal is a professional studio potter and student of Marguerite Wildenhain. Her 47 years of studio practice reflect the Pond Farm traditions advanced by her own contemporary style and interests. Her sculptures and functional wares echo a lifelong study of nature and immersion in the pottery of world cultures.
Jason Vantomme
Jason Vantomme started his ceramics journey more than 25 years ago in Evanston, Illinois, and continued studying and practicing in community studios across the US and Canada. In recent years, he and his wife established their own studio outside of Vancouver, British Columbia, where they currently live.
Jen Allen
Demonstrating Artist
Jen Allen is a studio potter, mother, and educator in Morgantown, West Virginia. She earned her BFA from the University of Alaska, Anchorage; and her MFA from Indiana University, Bloomington.
Jennifer Azzariti
Jennifer Azzariti is an artist and educator working in early childhood education, specifically in programs inspired by the Reggio Approach. As an atelierista and pedagogical director, her focus is on professional development, particularly the potential of the role of materials as languages for learning and expression.
Jennifer Ling Datchuk
Jennifer Ling Datchuk is an Assistant Professor of Studio Art at Texas State University in San Marcos. Datchuk holds an MFA in Artisanry from the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth and a BFA in Crafts from Kent State University in Ohio. In 2020, she was named a United States Artist Fellow in Craft.
John Bauer
John Bauer is a South African ceramicist with work in two national museums, who shows internationally. Bauer is an inventor and material engineer who currently tiles buildings in kaleidoscopic matchbox tiles, each one unique. Bauer is inept at many things, however, his disasters are fertile ground for artworks forging new frontiers.
Juan Quezada
Soon following his birth in the town of Tutuaca, Chihuahua, Mexico, Juan Quezada relocated with his family in Mata Ortíz, at that time, a town only three blocks wide. Beginning in early childhood, he liked to work with his hands. Painting and sculpting with few available tools and resources, he experimented with wood, paper and even the walls of his house. As a teenager, he quit school to earn money and help his family. During trips to the mountains to collect firewood and maguey cactus as a teenager, he found and began to collect pre-Hispanic pots and shards from the Mimbres and Paquime’ (Casas Grandes) cultures in caves and other places. Inspired by these shards, Quezada initiated a quest of empirical rediscovery and reinvention. His painterly vessels juxtapose swooping, curvilinear designs with tight, geometrical patterns honoring and innovating on historical traditions. In 1999, Mexico awarded Juan Quezada the Premio Nacional de Ciencias y Artes – its highest creative honor.
SiouxBean
SiouxBean works with clay to explore the relationships we have to cultural artifacts, ephemerality, visual culture, aesthetics, and the collective memory of the experiential. Grandson of a field worker, with roots in counter culture, the ceremonial smashing of his works goes against the craft culture of clay as a medium.
Josh DeWeese
Josh DeWeese is a Ceramics Professor at Montana State University in Bozeman and is currently serving as Interim Director for the School of Art. He is the former Director of the Archie Bray Foundation in Helena, Montana. DeWeese has exhibited and taught internationally and his work is included in collections around the world.
Joy Key
Joy Key is the Executive Director of Scenic City Clay Arts, a nonprofit community ceramics studio located in Chattanooga, Tennessee. With a mission of sharing access to all things clay through collaborative education, they serve more than 1,000 people each year with clay classes, programs, and a membership studio.
Julia Krueger
Julia Krueger studied art history (BA) and Canadian art history (MA) at Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario. She earned a BFA in Ceramics at the Alberta College of Art + Design (ACAD) in Calgary, Alberta, and a PhD in visual culture at the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario.
Juliana Wisdom
Juliana Wisdom is a Los Angeles-based artist. She earned her BFA from the University of Washington and MFA from Tyler School of Art and Architecture. She has presented on historical and contemporary issues in the decorative arts at institutions and academic conferences and shown artwork across the US.
Kala Stein
Kala Stein is an artist and educator working at the intersection of craft, design, and new technologies. Kala received her MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University and was the Director of Sonoma Ceramics & Arts at Sonoma Community Center for the past 7 years. Her studio is located in Sonoma, California.
Kari Marboe
Kari Marboe takes on the role of an artist and detective flattening as many data points as possible around the history of people, objects, and experiences in order to create new narratives that intertwine with our present moment. She presents her work in the form of ceramic sculptures, clay printed onto watercolor paper, archival images, accidentally stolen keys, and other site-specific elements. Marboe earned a BFA from California College of the Arts in 2008 and MFA from UC Berkeley in 2012. She has exhibited work at the Saint Mary’s College Museum of Art, CA, Greenwich House Pottery, NY, Mills College Art Museum, CA, A-B Projects (Nicole Seisler), CA, 500 Capp Street/Southern Exposure, CA, Berkeley Art Center, CA, Museum of Craft and Design, CA, Wave Pool Gallery, OH, Museum of Northern California Art, CA, Jacksonville University, FL, and the Waffle Shop Billboard, PA. She has also participated in residencies at Greenwich House Pottery, NY, Watershed Center for Ceramic Arts, ME, Mutual Stores, CA, and Elsewhere Museum, NC. Marboe lives in the Bay Area and is an Assistant Professor at California College of the Arts.
Kaitlyn Seamons
Katie Seamons is a creative, thoughtful artist and teacher who values experiences over lectures and her people above everything else. She currently teaches Sculpture, Ceramics, and Painting at Lone Peak High School in HighlandUtah.
Kathleen Kennedy
Kathleen Kennedy holds an MA in History and Humanities. She worked for a private cultural resources consulting firm before becoming a State Historian with the California State Parks. She provides guidance for the preservation and protection of historic resources and coordinates nominations to the National Register and National Historic Landmarks.
Kelsie Tyson
Kelsie Tyson is an artist based in Lewisburg, West Virginia. She earned her MFA in Ceramics from Temple University. Tyson aims to brighten folks' understanding of body size, shape, and color through the history of fatness in Appalachia—exploring how the struggle for Fat Liberation connects with Queer and Black Liberation.
Kenni Field
Kenni Field is a queer Black millennial ceramicist based in Lenapehoking (Philadelphia) making functional ceramics. Field is primarily self-taught and has worked as a studio technician, production assistant, and educator. They run a small batch ceramics business and are working to found a BIPOC centered artist collective for under-resourced artists.
Lisa Lockman
Lisa Lockman is an artist and a Professor of Art at Nebraska Wesleyan University where she teaches ceramics and metalsmithing. Her current work, ceramic murals and vessels, is influenced by maternal ancestry and the exploration of new technologies utilized with clay.
Lisa Reinertson
Lisa Reinertson is known for both her life size figurative ceramic sculptures and her large-scale public sculptures cast in bronze. Coming from a family of peace and social activists, Reinertson’s work has an underlying humanism that can be seen both in her poetic and environmentally charged ceramic figures with animals, to her more historic public commissions that express ideals of peace and social justice. In her public sculptures of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Cesar Chavez she blends bas-relief into her three-dimensional sculptural forms creating an historic and powerfully moving narrative. Her work combines a realism rooted in figurative art traditions, with a contemporary expression of social and psychological content. Reinertson completed her MFA at UC Davis in 1984, studying with Robert Arneson, and Manuel Neri. She has taught at several universities and colleges in Northern California including CSU Chico, Santa Clara University, UC Berkeley and the San Francisco Art Institute. Her ceramic work has been in exhibitions and museums nationally and internationally, and is in several public and private collections including the Crocker Art Museum, the ASU Art Museum, the Mint Museum and the American Museum of Ceramic Art. Reinertson has completed over 20 public commissions in bronze.
Lauren Chipeur
Lauren Chipeur is an artist based in Calgary on Treaty 7 Territory. She makes material and site-responsive installations that engage ceramic processes as a way to untangle the complexity of the material world.
Lillian Barongo Ayieng’a
Lillian Barongo Ayieng’a is a PhD Design Candidate at Jingdezhen Ceramic Institute, China. Before then she was an adjunct lecturer in design at Multimedia University of Kenya. Her research is focused on development of new material technology for product design in Kenya, previously researching on glaze formulations using geological materials.
Mandy Parslow
Mandy Parslow is a maker, educator, and researcher based in rural County Tipperary, Ireland. In her current practice, she explores perspectives on place through locally found materials—ceramic, organic and anthropological. She is lecturer in Ceramics at Limerick School of Art and Design.
Malcolm Mobutu Smith
Malcolm Mobutu Smith is an associate professor of ceramics and director of graduate studies in the Eskenazi School of Art at Indiana University whose work can be found in numerous private and public collections including the Wexler Gallery, Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, and Hunterdon Art Museum.
Marianne Chénard
Marianne Chénard is a Canadian artist who articulates herself around a site-specific approach to installation, illustrating the human perceptual relationship with nature while exhibiting attentiveness to natural environment agency. She recently earned her MFA from Alfred University and is pleased to share her experience with the NCECA community.
Marnia Johnston
Marnia Johnston, MFA (CCA), is an interdisciplinary sculptor, creating projects exploring the ideological struggle between the life and social sciences. Johnston is a James Irvine Foundation Fellow, has three Diplomas of Honor from the World Ceramic Biennale, and was an artist-in-residence at Anderson Ranch and the John Michael Kohler Arts/Industry.
Mary Beth Magyar
Mary Beth Magyar is a ceramic and community-engagement artist living and working in Rochester, Minnesota. Magyar is interested in making art more accessible to view and more accessible to show; smallärt is a mini gallery designed to do both.
Maria Mia Salazar
Maria Mia Salazar is a Marine Corps veteran, having served during Operation Iraqi freedom. She is a sculptor and visual artist. Salazar is the founder of Claymore Vets, a nonprofit whose C4 mission is to Cultivate a Connected and Creative Community of Veterans, First Responders and Artists roster in ceramics and visual arts to foster reconnection and post-traumatic growth. Their aim is to shift the paradigm of the explosions-reactive veteran. They were trained to be war machines but, at their core, they are creators.
Mary Catherine Bassett
Mary Catherine Bassett is Art Faculty at Laney College and Owner of Applied Contemporary gallery. She earned her MFA from RIT in 2012. MC has been an artist in residence at S12 in Bergen, Norway; and Penland School of Crafts. In her studio practice, she incorporates ceramic and glass to create abstract sculptural objects.
Michelle Ettrick
Demonstrating Artist
Michelle Ettrick was a non-English speaking 13-year old when she arrived in the United States in 1982. Life in Brooklyn, New York, was a stark contrast to her early memories of Panama. “As an Afro-Latina, I struggled to find a community that would accept me and where I felt I belonged. Clay is very personal material to me. I stretch, pull, pinch and form shapes where I leave evidence of my having been there. I follow up by drawing on my work, embracing my natural curly hair, heritage, womanhood, and at times current worldly struggles. My artwork is a record of my experiences as an Afro-Latina American.”
Mireille Perron
Mireille Perron is an artist, writer, educator, and founder of the Laboratory of Feminist Pataphysics, which promotes social experiments that masquerade as artworks and events. She is Professor Emerita at Alberta University of the Arts, where, among other subjects, she taught Craft Theory. She lives and works in Calgary, Canada.
Natalia Arbelaez
Natalia Arbelaez is a Colombian American artist, born and raised in Miami, Florida, to immigrant parents. She earned her BFA from Florida International University and her MFA from Ohio State University. Her work has been exhibited internationally, in museums, galleries, and included in various collections, such as the Everson Museum in Syracuse, New York; and the Museum of Art and Design, New York.
Qwist Joseph
Qwist Joseph holds a BFA from Colorado State University and an MFA from the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. In 2019, he completed a residency at the Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program and was named a 2019 NCECA Emerging Artist. Recently, his work was included in the Officine Saffi Exhibition in Milan, Italy.
Rachael Jones
Rachael Jones is a ceramic and mixed-media collaborative artist, born and raised in Helena Montana. Her work has taken her to many diverse ecologies that have influenced her drive to advocate for ecological awareness and holistic sustainability. She currently teaches ceramics and drawing at St. Lawrence University in upstate New York.
Robin Williams Turnage
Robin Williams Turnage is a ceramics instructor at Philadelphia’s Fleisher Art Memorial where she teaches Nigerian and Ghanaian pottery and at a Drug Rehabilitation Facility. Robin is an Associate Artist at The Clay Studio, and is presently exhibiting at The Philadelphia Airport while hosting her podcast called “Potters of Color 2.0”.
Reginald Pointer
Reginald Pointer is based in Washington DC where he teaches ceramics and printmaking at Howard University. He has taught art at Grambling State University, a workshop at Penland School of Crafts, and the Duke Ellington School of the Arts. He is the creator of the Clay Hero’s comic book and numerous ceramic games for enjoyment and learning with clay. He earned his MFA from Florida State University and a BFA from Howard University. The range of persons being taught over the many years stretches from persons with disabilities, toddlers, teenagers, senior citizens, and college students.
Rhett Russo
Rhett Russo is a designer, educator and a maker of ceramic objects. He currently serves as the Undergraduate Chair in Architecture at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI). Russo defines his approach to Architecture and Design as Ceramicology – a confluence between the ceramic process, the physics and chemistry of clay, and technology.
Rice Evans
Rice Evans is a multi-medium artist primarily working in clay and video living and working in Richmond, Virginia. Originally from the Midwest, Evans earned her BFA from Alfred University in 2016, and her MFA in Ceramics from Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) in 2021. Currently, she is an adjunct ceramics faculty at VCU.
Richard Burkett
Richard Burkett taught ceramics at San Diego State University (SDSU), including clay and glaze technology, for 30 years. He created HyperGlaze software for ceramics in 1988, and the first major internet database of glazes in the 1990s. He is the co-author of Mythical Figures & Mucawas, Ceramics: A Potter’s Handbook, and Porcelain Masters.
Risa Hricovsky
Risa Hricovsky is an Assistant Professor of Art at Lincoln Memorial University. In her work, she pushes boundaries of materiality and between art, design, and craft. Hricovsky earned an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) and has exhibited nationally and internationally. Select residencies include: The Studios at MASS MoCA, Guldagergaard in Denmark, and SIM in Iceland.
Russell Wrankle
Russell Wrankle is an Associate Professor of Art at Southern Utah University in Cedar City, Utah. He is the founder of Shape Theory Collective, an online gallery that supports the Last Prisoner Project whose purpose is to free the 40,000 cannabis prisoners from the for-profit Prison Industrial Complex.
Ruth Chambers
Ruth Chambers earned her MFA from the University of Regina in 1994, where she is now a Professor in the Department of Visual Arts. In her porcelain sculptures, modeled through direct observation, she addresses ideas of attentive looking, beauty, consumption, and temporality. She also publishes writings about contemporary craft and ceramics theory.
Saila Milja-Smyly
Saila Milja-Smyly raw-glazes and single-fires all of her functional and sculptural work for her Earthenly LLC stoneware ceramics brand. Her formal training in anthropology and law facilitates a rigorous research and design process, deferring to source materials while contrasting her Nordic heritage with coastal South Carolina living.
Sharon Virtue
Sharon Virtue has worked with clay for over 35 years. She began in the UK with a BA in Fine Art. In 1998 at Ruby’s Clay Studio in San Francisco, she developed the Mud Bus project, a community outreach program. Since 2001, she has worked on community projects in Africa, the Caribbean, UK and Brazil. She was AIR at the De Young Museum where she built an earth architecture project. Awarded a Travel grant from NCECA she worked in Northern Ghana on coil building techniques. She completed an MA in Community Arts from Goldsmiths University, while also being the studio manager of Turning Earth, the first open access ceramic studio in London. Sharon is also a teacher at The Potter’s Studio.
Shenny Cruces
Shenny Cruces is the Associate Professor of Art and Ceramics at San Joaquin Delta College. She received a BA in Ceramics from Illinois State University and a Master of Fine Arts in Ceramics from San Francisco State University. Her current body of work explores gender and the collected object.
Sanjit Sethi
Artist, cultural and academic leader, Sanjit Sethi is currently the President of the Minneapolis College of Art and Design with prior leadership roles including the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design at George Washington University, Memphis College of Art, the California College of the Arts, and the Santa Fe Art Institute.
Sam Tubiolo
Sam Tubiolo’s sculpture and public art themes include human presence, passage of time, and sense of place. He holds a BFA from Rochester Institute of Technology, an MFA from the University of New Mexico, and is a retired professor of Ceramics at Sierra College, Nevada County Campus.
Samuel Nortey
Samuel Nortey is an artist and associate professor in the Department of Industrial Art (Ceramics Section), Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana. He holds a PhD in African Art and Culture. He recontextualizes materials and forms to engage viewers on social issues.
Sharon Norwood
Sharon Norwood is an artist of Jamaican ancestry working in painting and ceramics. Norwood earned a BFA from the University Of South Florida and an MFA from Florida State University. She has exhibited extensively and most recently participated as artist in residence at the McColl Center for the Creative Arts.
Sienna Orlando-Lalaguna
Sienna Orlando-Lalaguna is the owner and maker behind Sienna Ceramics, and the founder of Strega Studios in Chico, California. She designs and creates a line of pottery for farm-to-table living and the appreciation of food, as well as sculpture inspired by the natural world, and a deep connection to plants.
Solomon Adler
Solomon or "Zully" Adler is a PhD candidate in Contemporary Art History and Theory at Oxford University's Ruskin School. His research follows the work of artist Martin Wong through the late 20th century, as he navigated the realms of vernacular art, counterculture, and American street life.
Stacy Jo Scott
Stacy Jo Scott is an artist and educator based in Eugene, Oregon. She uses ceramic processes as material anchors from which to navigate shifting landscapes of culture, identity, and embodiment through digital processes, trance practices, chance operations, and research. She is an Assistant Professor at the University of Oregon.
Steve Dilley
The Veterans Art Project advocates for Artmaking that creates mental wealth and community. In 2020, VETART was awarded a multiyear California Statewide contract for Mental Health and wellness for Veterans through innovation funding by the Mental Health Services Oversight & Accountability Commission, a California State Agency.
Steve Hilton
Steve Hilton is an artist and professor currently teaching at MSU Texas in Wichita Falls, TX. He earned his MFA in Ceramics from ASU, an MS in Art Education, and a BS in Geology from Missouri State University. Presently most of his work is unfired and installation-based. Hilton is a Fellow of the Council of NCECA.
Tasha Reneé
Tasha Reneé is a potter from Sacramento, California, who focuses on functional work. She has grown a small business around selling to local shops and some larger retailers, but has shifted her focus to learning more about the craft and selling directly to consumers. She loves working with raw work, and carved forms, but also enjoys playing with clay and movement.
Takuro Shibata
Takuro Shibata is a ceramic artist who lived and worked in Shigaraki, Japan, and now lives in Seagrove, North Carolina. He earned a Bachelor of Engineering Degree in Applied Chemistry from Doshisha University, Japan. He is a ceramic-material specialist and the director of STARworks Ceramics. He is a member of the International Academy of Ceramics.
Tiffany Thomas
Tiffany Thomas is a native of Florence, South Carolina. Born in 1985, she was raised on a farm and experienced the ups and downs of living a farm life. She incorporates her childhood into her ceramics by using bright colors, which are associated with playfulness. Her clay of choice is translucent porcelain, fired with colorful stains and glazes. Her ceramic work focuses on an array of designs; from cups and mugs to light fixtures and table pieces. All of her pieces are hand carved. Tiffany has exhibited in numerous shows such as The Clay Center in Philadelphia, The South Carolina Arts Commission Gala, The North Carolina Museum of Art Art of the Auction, Spartanburg Juried Competition, and The Pee Dee Regional Art Competition. Tiffany graduated from Francis Marion University in 2012 with a degree in Visual Arts with concentrations in ceramics and painting.
Tara Carpenter Estrada
Tara Carpenter Estrada is an associate professor of art education at Brigham Young University in Utah. As a practicing artist, she makes mixed-media and ceramic art that is shown in national and international juried exhibitions. Carpenter Estrada is also the director of BYU Jumpst(ART), a series of workshops for K–12 students.
Tara Daly
An artist who’s been in residence at Anderson Ranch, Penland, Santa Fe Art Institute, the Vermont Studio Center, Tara Daly is a California ceramicist whose works have been exhibited at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, the Richmond Arts Center, Contemporary Craft Center, among other non-profit galleries nationally.
Timea Tihanyi
Timea Tihanyi is a ceramic artist and educator. She is the founder and director of Slip Rabbit, a cross-disciplinary digital ceramics research/mentoring lab and design studio in Seattle, Washington. Tihanyi is a Teaching Professor at the University of Washington, and a member of Women in 3D Printing.
Tom Edwards
Tom Edwards works out of his home in Evergreen, Colorado. A full time potter since 1978, he produces a line of high-fire functional porcelain decorated with cartoon imagery. He considers his sense of humor to be the secret to his longevity in the field of ceramics.
Varuni Kanagasundaram
The creative practice, research and teaching of Varuni Kanagasundaram, based in Melbourne, Australia, is an exploration of clay in a multidisciplinary manner to convey expression of displacement and migrant experience through the exploring of transience and uncertainty. The artist translates rituals of South Asia, considering intersections of materiality, agency of creator, place, and community.
Valerie Zimany
Valerie Zimany is Chair and Professor at Clemson University and member of the International Academy of Ceramics. She earned her MFA from Kanazawa College of Art as a Fulbright Fellow and Japanese Government Scholar. Her work resides in numerous public and private collections, and she exhibits nationally and internationally.
Virgil Ortiz
Demonstrating Artist
Virgil Ortiz is one of the most avant-garde artists of his time. With a career spanning four decades, Ortiz’s artistry extends across various media and boundaries—challenging societal expectations and breaking taboos. His vision fuses his Pueblo culture with sci-fi, fantasy, and apocalyptic themes, yielding imagery that is both provocative and futuristic.
Dr. Wendy Gers
Award-winning curator, coach & cultural producer, Dr. Wendy Gers recently joined the Princessehof National Ceramics Museum as Curator of Modern and Contemporary Ceramics (Netherlands). She is also a Visiting Professor at the University of Sunderland (UK) and Research Associate at the University of Johannesburg (South Africa).
Ysabel Alma Gray
Ysabel Alma Gray has been teaching ceramics for six years at a low-income highschool in California. In 2010 she completed her BFA in Ceramics from California State Long Beach, a Single Subject Art Credential in 2015, and an MA in Art Education in 2021 from Eastern Illinois University.
Zelal Basodan
Zelal Basodan is a Saudi emerging ceramicist who holds a BA and MA in Islamic Arts, from King Abdul-Aziz University, Saudi Arabia, where she also worked from 2009–2018, in addition to working at Jeddah University since 2018. Simultaneously, she is a Doctoral Researcher at Loughborough University, UK, exploring the emerging field of Islamic Studio Ceramics.
The programming schedule for the 2022 Conference is structured around themes and keynote speakers to inspire, reflect, and create equity action in ceramic art and education. Themes will be Advocacy & Activism, Global Community, Education and Responsive Practice. Keynote speakers will offer vital perspectives on the current issues in contemporary societal culture and the dynamic shifts taking place.
Advocacy & Activism presentations will question established canons, discuss ways through which engagement with change takes place in ceramic art, teaching and learning. Clay’s tactile nature records histories. Can the material’s plasticity also foster intentional equity that encompasses gender, class, race, and the work of communities?
Keynote Session:
Dolores Huerta | Every Moment - Si, Se Puede
Dolores Huerta is a civil rights activist and community organizer. She has worked for labor rights and social justice for over 50 years. In 1962, she and Cesar Chavez founded the United Farm Workers union. She served as Vice President and played a critical role in many of the union’s accomplishments for four decades. In 2002, she received the Puffin/Nation $100,000 prize for Creative Citizenship which she used to establish the Dolores Huerta Foundation (DHF). DHF is connecting groundbreaking community-based organizing to state and national movements to register and educate voters; advocate for education reform; bring about infrastructure improvements in low-income communities; advocate for greater equality for the LGBT community; and create strong leadership development. She has received numerous awards: among them The Eleanor Roosevelt Humans Rights Award from President Clinton in 1998. In 2012 President Obama bestowed Dolores with The Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor in the United States.
Education presentations will investigate innovations and reinventions of teaching modalities, resources, and models to create equitable and accessible learning environments and opportunities. Critical responses to current circumstances will address anti-racist approaches in education and generate discussion on resources for school and community contexts.
Keynote Session Thursday
Courtney M. Leonard | BREACH: Logbook 22 | An Intermodal Time
Courtney M. Leonard is a Shinnecock artist and filmmaker who explores marine biology, Indigenous food sovereignty, migration, and human environmental impact. In Leonard’s current projects, she articulates the multiple definitions of the term breach and investigates and documents Indigenous communities’ historical ties to water, marine life, and native cultures of subsistence.
Global Community presentations will address ceramic art internationally to examine the impact of intercultural exchange and explore ways of creating communities of opportunity through ceramic art. In this time of global pandemic, perhaps we have never been more connected despite the physical space.
Keynote Session Friday:
Juan Quezada | Unearthed Heritage- The Life and Art of Juan Quezada
Soon following his birth in the town of Tutuaca, Chihuahua, Mexico, Juan Quezada relocated with his family in Mata Ortíz, at that time, a town only three blocks wide. Beginning in early childhood, he liked to work with his hands. Painting and sculpting with available few tools and resources, he experimented with wood, paper and even the walls of his house. As a teenager, he quit school to earn money and help his family. During trips to the mountains to collect firewood and maguey cactus as a teenager, he found and began to collect pre-Hispanic pots and shards from the Mimbres and Paquime’ (Casas Grandes) cultures in caves and other places. Inspired by these shards, Quezada initiated a quest of empirical rediscovery and reinvention. His painterly vessels juxtapose swooping, curvilinear designs with tight, geometrical patterns honoring and innovating on historical traditions. In 1999, Mexico awarded Juan Quezada the Premio Nacional de Ciencias y Artes – its highest creative honor.
Responsive Practice presentations will provide a platform to reflect, share, and consider new ways to integrate theories and methods to build resilient, adaptive, and inclusive practices and opportunities in the ceramic arts.
Closing Lecture:
Sanjit Sethi | A Case for Creative Cultural Leadership
Artist, cultural and academic leader, Sanjit Sethi is currently the President of the Minneapolis College of Art and Design with prior leadership roles including the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design at George Washington University, Memphis College of Art, the California College of the Arts, and the Santa Fe Art Institute.
Please review options in the flexible remote pricing model below. New registrants, please select the price that best meets your circumstance.
STANDARD REMOTE BUNDLE
Includes one year Standard membership, access to remote content during the event and for one full year from the start of the event, and print journal.
STANDARD MEMBER RELIEF
Includes one year Standard membership, access to remote content during the event and for one full year from the start of the event, and print journal. Register at this rate if your financial situation has been adversely impacted by the pandemic.
Individual Student Rates - for those enrolled in 2 or more courses in degree granting higher education institutions and post-baccalaureate programs. Documentation must be provided at the time of registration.
STUDENT REMOTE BUNDLE
Includes one year Student membership, access to remote content during the event and for one full year, and print journal.
STUDENT MEMBER RELIEF
Includes one year Student membership, access to remote content during the event and for one year, and print journal. For students whose financial situation has been adversely impacted by the pandemic.
STUDENT MEMBER RELIEF
Includes one year Student membership, access to remote content during the event and for one year, and print journal. For students whose financial situation has been adversely impacted by the pandemic.
Includes access to content March 16-19, 2022. Does not include member benefits. Select this rate if your resources are limited.
Upgrade to extended access by purchasing an NCECA membership at any time. Contact support@nceca.net if you have questions or need assistance.
Early Bird Pricing: October 2021- March 2, 2022 midnight ET
Individual Standard Rates - for those over 18 years old and not enrolled in high school, or higher education degree or post-baccalaureate programs.
MEMBER FULL CONFERENCE PASS
IN-PERSON 4-DAY PASS
Includes a 4-day pass to the In-Person conference with access to remote content during and after conference, and print journal.
BUNDLES
STANDARD IN-PERSON 4-DAY PASS BUNDLE
Includes one year Standard membership, 4-day pass to the In-Person conference, and access to remote content during and after conference, and print journal.
NON-MEMBER FULL CONFERENCE PASS
IN-PERSON 4-DAY PASS
Includes a 4-day pass to the In-Person conference with access to remote content during the conference.
Individual Student Rates - for those enrolled in 2 or more courses in degree granting higher education institutions and post-baccalaureate programs. Documentation must be provided at the time of registration.
STUDENT IN-PERSON 4-DAY PASS
Includes a 4-day pass to the In-Person conference with access to remote content during and after conference, and print journal.
STUDENT IN-PERSON 4-DAY PASS BUNDLE
Includes one year Student membership, 4-day pass to the In-Person conference, and access to remote content during and after conference, and print journal.
STUDENT IN-PERSON 4-DAY PASS
Includes a 4-day pass to the In-Person conference with access to remote content during the conference.
Wednesday or Saturday
Member
$40 per day
Non-Member
$50 per day
Thursday or Friday
Member
$125 per day
Non-Member
$150 per day
Grades K-8
Free-No registration required
(Must be accompanied by adult)
Grades 9-12
$15 per day-Register along with a guardian
(Conference Policy Permission slip required)
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To support a full creative life for all, we at NCECA commit to championing policies and practices of cultural equity that empower a just, inclusive, and equitable nation. In that spirit, we are committed to making our meetings and events as equitable and inclusive as possible. Attendees needing accommodations for any learning environment may contact Conference Manager Dori Nielsen at dori@nceca.net.
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No refunds will be granted for registrations to virtual content. If you are unable to view any purchased content during the scheduled webcasting times, all events in the Conference will be recorded and available for replay on demand. If you registered at a rate that includes NCECA membership, you will be able to access this content on the event website for up to one full year following the opening date of the event. Those who registered at the lowest rate, which does not include NCECA membership will be able to access content only during the event dates.