Exhibitions: Southern Tasmania (open for extended dates)
Details
A display of over 150 British blue and white underglaze decorated plates and platters dating from the late 18th century to the 1920s. The exhibition is arranged into five themes: Exotic
Details
A display of over 150 British blue and white underglaze decorated plates and platters dating from the late 18th century to the 1920s. The exhibition is arranged into five themes:
Exotic places (which includes Hobart Town); Antiquity and other tales; images of China; images of Britain; Plants and animals
Time
December 1 (Saturday) 10:00 am - May 31 (Friday) 4:00 pm
Location
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery
Dunn Place, Hobart
Details
A small exhibition of twenty three teapots by studio potters drawn from the TMAG collection. The teapots date from the 1970s to 2000s and are a microcosm of the diversity
Details
A small exhibition of twenty three teapots by studio potters drawn from the TMAG collection. The teapots date from the 1970s to 2000s and are a microcosm of the diversity of ceramics practice over that time. The collection includes the earthiest wood fired teapots through to the finest porcelain, and all stations between.
John Bartram (1954 – 1996)
Les Blakebrough (b. 1930)
Hermie Cornelisse (b. 1959)
Stephen Cox (n.d.)
Zsolt Faludi (b. 1953)
Andrew Halford (b. 1953)
Gwyn Hanssen Pigott (1935 – 2013)
Phillip McConnell (b. 1947)
Jeff Mincham (b. 1950)
Chris Myers (b. England 1945)
Tony Nankervis (b. 1944)
Dawn Oakford (b. 1958)
Jenny Orchard (b. 1951)
Ben Richardson (b. 1951)
Peter Rushforth (1920 – 2015)
Shiga Shigeo (1928 – 2011)
Vipoo Srivilasa (b. 1969)
Barbara Swarbrick (b. 1945)
Roger Webb (b. 1946)
Kevin White (b. 1954)
Image: Shiga Shigeo (1928 – 2011), Teapot, 1970s, glazed stoneware and cane
19.2 x 17.5 x 13.2 cm
Presented in memory of Anthony Howard by Eve and Ruth Howard, 2015
P2015.20
Time
March 27 (Wednesday) 10:00 am - December 31 (Tuesday) 4:00 pm
Location
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery
Dunn Place, Hobart
Details
A small display of Australian studio ceramics focusing on platters and vessels. The exhibition includes works from the 1940s through to the 1990s. Les Blakebrough (b. 1930) Patrick Collins (b. 1942) Robin Cox
Details
A small display of Australian studio ceramics focusing on platters and vessels. The exhibition includes works from the 1940s through to the 1990s.
Les Blakebrough (b. 1930)
Patrick Collins (b. 1942)
Robin Cox (b. 1935)
Greg Daly (b. 1954)
Pippin Drysdale (b. 1943)
Ivan Englund (1915 – 2007)
Victor Greenaway (b. 1947)
Milton Moon (b. 1926)
Harold Hughan (1893 – 1987)
Tim Jacobs (b. 1950)
Lorraine Lee (b. 1951)
Carl McConnell (1926 – 2003)
Cynthia Mitchell (b. 1930)
Alan Peascod (1943 – 2007)
Shiga Shigeo (1928 – 2011)
Derek Smith (b. 1931)
Penny Smith (b. 1947)
Hiroe Swen (b. 1934)
Image: Patrick Collins (b. 1942) Stage II, 1994, glazed earthenware, 60.8 x 60 x 7.5 cm
Purchased: Easterbrook Bequest Fund, 1995. P1995.13
Time
March 27 (Wednesday) 10:00 am - December 31 (Tuesday) 4:00 pm
Location
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery
Dunn Place, Hobart
Details
Germination - the process of growth and development - describes both the transitional nature of working as an emerging artist, and the metamorphosis of seeds and pollen which has long
Details
Germination – the process of growth and development – describes both the transitional nature of working as an emerging artist, and the metamorphosis of seeds and pollen which has long fascinated me. Growing up I felt torn between pursuit of a career in the arts or biology; as an artist my practice now bridges these two passions. These pieces are studies in form exploring the visual tropes of seeds, pollen and spores as biomorphic objects, and are hand built in porcelain paper clay. They were recently completed whilst working as Artist in Residence at Don College (Devonport) through Arts Tasmania ‘Education Residency Program’, and I am delighted to present them for the 2019 Australian Ceramics Triannale through the support of the Salamanca Arts Centre.
This exhibition can be found in the Lightbox, in the window between the main entrance doorways at the Salamanca Arts Centre.
Image: Funicles by Samantha Dennis. Image courtesy of artist.
Presented in partnership with the Salamanca Arts Centre.
Time
April 6 (Saturday) 10:00 am - May 5 (Sunday) 5:00 pm
Location
Salamanca Arts Centre
77 Salamanca Place, Hobart, Tasmania
Details
Four Ceramicists working collectively from the Tasmanian Ceramics Association Studio in Glenorchy, representing inter-generational perspectives in the contemporary art craft culture of Tasmania. Artists: Margot Butler, Alice Hutchison, Anthea Rogerson,
Details
Four Ceramicists working collectively from the Tasmanian Ceramics Association Studio in Glenorchy, representing inter-generational perspectives in the contemporary art craft culture of Tasmania.
Artists: Margot Butler, Alice Hutchison, Anthea Rogerson, Lisa Wise.
Opening event: Thursday 11 April, 6pm. All welcome.
Artwork: Lisa Wise
Time
April 12 (Friday) 10:00 am - May 4 (Saturday) 3:00 pm
Location
Moonah Art Centre
23-27 Albert Road Moonah
Details
Artist and curator Kirsha Kaechele has designed a collection of ceramic tableware for Eat the Problem, a surrealist exploration of invasive species in food and art, culminating in a book
Details
Artist and curator Kirsha Kaechele has designed a collection of ceramic tableware for Eat the Problem, a surrealist exploration of invasive species in food and art, culminating in a book and a performative exhibition at Mona.
Kaechele has worked with ceramicists Nanna Bayer and Zsolt Faludi, as well as 3D modellers to translate her forms into clay and colour.
Artists: Kirsha Kaechele, Elena Stokaner, Amelia Barlow, Tora Lopez.
Time
April 13 (Saturday) 10:00 am - September 2 (Monday) 6:00 pm
Location
MONA
655 Main Rd, Berridale
Details
Ceramic works inspired by Mt Field National Park Image: Cathy Franzi, Tasmanian Waratah, 2019. Porcelain, sgraffito, 36.7h x 21.2 w x 19.1d cm. Photograph by Andrew Sikorski-Art Atelier.
Details
Ceramic works inspired by Mt Field National Park
Image: Cathy Franzi, Tasmanian Waratah, 2019. Porcelain, sgraffito, 36.7h x 21.2 w x 19.1d cm.
Photograph by Andrew Sikorski-Art Atelier.
Time
April 24 (Wednesday) 9:30 am - May 5 (Sunday) 5:00 pm
Location
Royal Tasmanian Botanic Gardens, The Botanical Shop
Queens Domain, Hobart
Details
Glazing always presents a challenge for me whether I am choosing it for functional ware or making choices for my signature pieces. My wheel thrown tall forms are mostly made
Details
Glazing always presents a challenge for me whether I am choosing it for functional ware or making choices for my signature pieces. My wheel thrown tall forms are mostly made from wild-clay dug from the surrounds of my studio at Deep Bay, in the Huon Valley, Tasmania. I have approached these elongated forms as a painter would a blank canvas. My layered glazing creates imaginative vistas. My palette seeks to replicate the colours of the local landscape and capture the magic of the extraordinary sunsets. I hope that you will enjoy the connection I have with my enchanted place in this different space.
This exhibition can be found at Artefacts, within the Salamanca Arts Centre building.
Time
April 26 (Friday) 9:30 am - May 24 (Friday) 5:00 pm
Location
Salamanca Arts Centre
77 Salamanca Place, Hobart, Tasmania
Details
An exhibition by two partners from Off Centre collective, Jude Maisch and Kim Foale. Both artists have focussed on decorative surfaces, but their techniques and in particular the meaning behind their
Details
An exhibition by two partners from Off Centre collective, Jude Maisch and Kim Foale.
Both artists have focussed on decorative surfaces, but their techniques and in particular the meaning behind their work is the point of difference.
While endangered species and coral bleaching are highlighted in Maisch’s pinched porcelain vessels, Foale’s slipcast vessels reference our public and private identities and queries what happens if those public masks are removed.
This exhibition can be found at Off Centre, within the Salamanca Arts Centre building.
Image: artwork by Kim Foale
Time
April 26 (Friday) 10:00 am - May 9 (Thursday) 5:00 pm
Location
Salamanca Arts Centre
77 Salamanca Place, Hobart, Tasmania
Details
Showcasing Handmark's stable of Tasmanian ceramic artists Jane Bamford, Nanna Bayer, Sally Curry, Zsolt Fauldi, Dawn Oakford, Penny Smith, Sallee Warner, Mairi Ward and Ella Noonan, along with international guest
Details
Showcasing Handmark’s stable of Tasmanian ceramic artists Jane Bamford, Nanna Bayer, Sally Curry, Zsolt Fauldi, Dawn Oakford, Penny Smith, Sallee Warner, Mairi Ward and Ella Noonan, along with international guest artists Kadri Parnamets and Ingrid Allik.
Opening event: Tuesday April 30 at 6pm, by Grace Cochrane. All welcome.
Time
April 26 (Friday) 10:00 am - May 13 (Monday) 5:00 pm
Location
Handmark Gallery
77 Salamanca Place, Hobart
Details
An exhibition showcasing the potential and validity of clay as a contemporary installation medium. The second iteration of an exhibition staged in Tasmania in 2013, the original premise, which
Details
An exhibition showcasing the potential and validity of clay as a contemporary installation medium. The second iteration of an exhibition staged in Tasmania in 2013, the original premise, which challenged the artists to resolve the mode of presentation beyond the use of a plinth, is strengthened through complete removal of the work from a traditional gallery space. The title refers to the word ‘enucleation’, used primarily in the field of medicine, meaning to remove without detriment.
Artists: Penny Byrne, Samantha Dennis, Pie Bolton, Ebony Russell, Fiona Fell and Arun Sharma.
Opening event: Tuesday April 30, 4.30pm. All welcome.
Curated by Serena Rosevear
Artwork: Pellucidar, 2018 by PieBolton, ceramic, glaze, lustre, acrylic mirror, led. 4mx1mx3m.
Time
April 27 (Saturday) 11:00 am - May 26 (Sunday) 5:00 pm
Location
Rosny Barn
18 Bligh Street, Rosny Park
Details
Continuing a dynamic tradition since 1972 the Tasmanian Potters Society, now the Tasmanian Ceramics Association (TCA), has mounted vibrant successful annual exhibitions of ceramic art, without fail, every year for
Details
Continuing a dynamic tradition since 1972 the Tasmanian Potters Society, now the Tasmanian Ceramics Association (TCA), has mounted vibrant successful annual exhibitions of ceramic art, without fail, every year for 46 years.
The highlight of the year for the TCA is the annual members’ exhibition where an outstanding display of Tasmanian clay innovation, resourcefulness and creativity is brought together in one place to delight the viewer and inspire creativity within the arts community. It aims to raise the profile of clay as a means of creative expression. It encourages, supports, grows membership and fosters participation by members to exhibit commendable examples of their work.
The exhibition theme, ‘Diversity’, will demonstrate the many diverse imaginative and creative uses of clay.
Opening event with guest speaker and presentation of awards Sunday 28 April 2.00pm.
Artwork by Heather Creet.
Time
April 27 (Saturday) 11:00 am - May 19 (Sunday) 5:00 pm
Location
Rosny Schoolhouse Gallery
Rosny Hill Road, Rosny Park, Tasmania
Details
The Guildhall collection was donated to TMAG by the City of London in 1938. It contains archaeological material excavated from the centre London – for colonial Australians the heart of
Details
The Guildhall collection was donated to TMAG by the City of London in 1938. It contains archaeological material excavated from the centre London – for colonial Australians the heart of empire and the embodiment of ‘home’. This collection raises problematic issues around nation, histories, identity, place, space & displacement.
BACKGROUND
The Guildhall collection was donated to the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery in 1939, at the request of the then Governor of Tasmania, Sir Ernest Clarke (1864-1951). In the previous year the Guildhall Museum of the City of London – now the Museum of London – had donated a collection of objects to the City of Sydney to mark that city’s 150thanniversary. Similar collections had been donated to St John’s (New Brunswick, Canada), Otago (New Zealand), and three other Australian cities, Adelaide, Melbourne and Perth. Sir Ernest Clarke’s letter to the Guildhall is quoted in the Mercury of 12 January 1939;
“… such gifts are of great historical and educational interest and are especially valuable to a community so far away as our isolated State. If the Corporation of the City of London could further add to their patriotic actions by sending a similar gift to the Tasmanian Museum at Hobart, the Government and the royal Society of Tasmania would be most grateful. Such a gift would cement the ties of Empire between widely separated units of the British people, for the Tasmanians are a loyal and devoted people, almost exclusively of pure British race, and they already have a deep and reverential regard for your great city”
The newspaper further reports that the objects were all excavated in the famous ‘square mile’ of central London and spanned a period of ‘some 1,500 years’. The objects in the collection are emblems of a displaced history felt by many Australians in the 19th and early-to-mid 20th centuries. Still loyal subjects of the Empire, they felt that the greater part of their history belonged to another place, a place that by 1938 many of them had never seen. This collection, so closely associated with that distant ‘home’ was an opportunity to have material evidence in the form of relics of the history of British Tasmanians stretching beyond the brief 135 years of local history, dating from the invasion of Tasmania in 1803.
Image: Maker unknown (United Kingdom). Apothecary jar, Late 18th century, glazed earthenware
Presented by the Guildhall Museum
P1939.60
Time
April 29 (Monday) 10:00 am - December 31 (Tuesday) 4:00 pm
Location
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery
Dunn Place, Hobart
Details
This design exhibition has a strong focus on ceramics, exploring changing expressions of Australian identity through studio crafts and design in the twentieth and early twenty first centuries. It encompasses
Details
This design exhibition has a strong focus on ceramics, exploring changing expressions of Australian identity through studio crafts and design in the twentieth and early twenty first centuries. It encompasses the arts and crafts movement, the Modernism, mid-century Australiana, the studio crafts movement, postmodernism through to the early 21stcentury.
In the early 20th century Australian designers expressed national and local identity through motifs and patterns based on native plants and, to a lesser extent, animals. This subject matter was well suited to the then internationally prevalent Arts and Crafts and Art Nouveau styles. However, after the First World War, Australian designers sought expressions of identity and uniqueness more in tune with the aesthetic influences of the Modernist style with its origins in Europe. Locally, this was complicated by a rejection of European, particularly British, traditions and a desire to find expressions and symbols specific to this country. While plants and animals continued to be important sources for design and symbolism, designers followed European artists in drawing inspiration from what was then regarded as “primitive” art by turning to Australian Aboriginal art and design. In so doing, they carelessly appropriated sacred motifs and patterns for commercial and domestic purposes. Locally, Violet Mace, influenced by the writings of Margaret Preston, was one of the earliest potters to use Australian Aboriginal motifs in her work. In the following decades, mid-century designers also freely represented Australian Aboriginal men, women and children. Though often depicted as heroic, they were also safely locked away in either the past or the distant desert. Many of the potteries producing these wares were owned by and/or employed recent migrants, who had brought with them advanced technical skills and sophisticated design aesthetics gained in European art school training. Taking as a point of departure the international Anglo-oriental movement, which favoured elemental processes, truth to materials and abstraction, some Australian potters sought non-representational modes of expression to explore identity and landscape. Local minerals were used to make clays and glazes, literally incorporating the land into the work. More broadly, vessel and sculptural forms were used to express visual and spiritual aspects of the land. In the late 1970s and the 1980s, with the advent of post-modernism, designers rejected authenticity. Pop culture and historical styles were appropriated and eclectically blended, often with an ironic humour. Design engaged with political and social issues, critiquing Australian settler culture and the colonial cringe amongst other things. The tail end of this period also saw a resurgence of Australian Indigenous art. In Tasmania, Indigenous designers and craftspeople used the traditions of their people to reconnect with both their history and their land, revealing a degree of intimate knowledge far deeper than suggested by the few charismatic species that had been favoured in European Australian design.
Image: Lauren Black (b. 1971, artist); Les Blakebrough (b. 1929, maker); Southern Ice Porcelain Pty Ltd (retailer)
Display plate: Nothofagus gunnii – Deciduous beech, 2004. Glazed porcelain with printed transfer enamels and gold lustre.
30 x 29.3 x 2.6 cm
P2017.19.4
Time
April 29 (Monday) 10:00 am - December 31 (Tuesday) 4:00 pm
Location
Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery
Dunn Place, Hobart
Details
From out of the fiery furnace came the work of Tasmanian industrial and studio potters. In this exhibition, colonial era artisan potters are represented by makers such as Worby, Sherwin,
Details
From out of the fiery furnace came the work of Tasmanian industrial and studio potters. In this exhibition, colonial era artisan potters are represented by makers such as Worby, Sherwin, Port Arthur, Goulburn, Yeates, Huon, Campbell Bros and McHugh. The 1920s-60s studio potters will be represented by Maude Poynter, Violet Mace and Mylie Peppin. This exhibition is a must for all who pursue creativity through clay.
Admission: Adults $10, concession $8.
Hero[ine] image: Maude Poynter (1869-1945, active in Tasmania 1917-1945), Peacock plate, Bothwell, 1922, private collection.
Time
April 30 (Tuesday) 10:00 am - June 1 (Saturday) 4:30 pm
Location
Narryna Heritage Museum
103 Hampden Rd, Battery Point, Hobart
01may12:00 am04(may 4)11:59 pmHunter St VignettesOPEN: May 1-4, 24 hrsHunter St, Sullivans Cove
Details
Take a stroll along Hunter St to view four isolated pockets of light, colour and sculptural form amidst this historic streetscape – three within the windows of what is
Details
Take a stroll along Hunter St to view four isolated pockets of light, colour and sculptural form amidst this historic streetscape – three within the windows of what is now the University of Tasmania School of Creative Arts and Media (viewable 24hrs) and one in the Jam Packed Cafe entry walkway to the Henry Jones Art Hotel atrium (viewable during business hours).
Artists: Alice Couttoupes, Pattie Beerens, Philippa Taylor and Nanna Bayer.
Artwork: Alice Couttoupes. Image: Aaron Horsley
Project supported by:
Time
1 (Wednesday) 12:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 11:59 pm
Location
Hunter St precinct
Hunter St, Sullivans Cove
Details
This exhibition of ceramic objects is an exploration of form, each piece gently blurs the boundaries between sculptural form and functional object as it presents a sense of curve and
Details
This exhibition of ceramic objects is an exploration of form, each piece gently blurs the boundaries between sculptural form and functional object as it presents a sense of curve and balance enclosing space, time, memory and emotion.
My collections of objects are intended to create a space for contemplation and a sense of tranquillity where silence, stillness and restraint abide alongside a notion of simplicity and humility.
Opening event Tuesday April 30, 5.30pm. All welcome.
Photography by Terence Bogue
Title. ‘Collected Silences’.
Approx. dimensions of individual pieces (dimensions variable )
30 x 5 x 5 cm.
Materials. Porcelain, hand built, black fired.
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Colville Gallery
91a Salamanca Place, Hobart
Details
1000's of years of pottery tradition meets the children of Tasmania. This display features a collection of vessels made by local children with visiting Rajasthani Potters.
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Moonah Art Centre
23-27 Albert Road Moonah
01may10:00 am15(may 15)4:00 pmEndemic EarthOPEN: 1-15 May, 10am - 4pm.7 Goshawk Way, Kingston
Details
Endemic Earth- 23 contemporary ceramicists’ work inspired by Tasmanian botanicals. Andrew Halford, Cathy Franzi, Chrystie Longworth, Claire Johnson, Gretel Corrie, Hana Vasak (Dasa ceramics), Julie Pennington, Katarina Wells, Kate Wischusen, Keiko
Details
Endemic Earth- 23 contemporary ceramicists’ work inspired by Tasmanian botanicals.
Andrew Halford, Cathy Franzi, Chrystie Longworth, Claire Johnson, Gretel Corrie, Hana Vasak (Dasa ceramics), Julie Pennington, Katarina Wells, Kate Wischusen, Keiko Matsui, Kerryn Levy, Luca Lettieri, Luke Ryan, Milly Dent, Penelope Duke, Philippa Taylor, Phoebe Kretschmer, Rose Jensen-Holm, Sarah Rayner, Susan Simonini, Tara Burke, Timna Taylor and Ulrica Trulsson.
Curated by Amber Creswell Bell and Caroline Davies Choi.
Opening event: Friday May 3, 5.30pm. All welcome.
Artwork: Sarah Rayner, Telopea truncata, Flowerbone series. Photographer Cristie Quail
Time
1 (Wednesday) 10:00 am - 15 (Wednesday) 4:00 pm
Location
Kingborough Community Hub
7 Goshawk Way, Kingston
Details
Interstitial is a group exhibition exploring ceramic objects and space. Artists:Belinda Winkler, Kirsten Coelho, Patsy Hely and Kelly Austin. Opening event: Thursday May 2, 5:30pm – 7:30pm, all welcome.
Details
Interstitial is a group exhibition exploring ceramic objects and space.
Artists:Belinda Winkler, Kirsten Coelho, Patsy Hely and Kelly Austin.
Opening event: Thursday May 2, 5:30pm – 7:30pm, all welcome.
Time
1 (Wednesday) 10:00 am - 25 (Saturday) 4:00 pm
Location
Bett Gallery
1/65 Murray St, Hobart.
Details
This exhibition brings together a diverse group of contemporary ceramicists of national importance, celebrating the practices of Jenny Orchard, Roger Webb, Patrick Collins and Jeff Mincham. Each artist brings
Details
This exhibition brings together a diverse group of contemporary ceramicists of national importance, celebrating the practices of Jenny Orchard, Roger Webb, Patrick Collins and Jeff Mincham. Each artist brings a depth of technique and tradition, which is uniquely applied through a contemporary lens, including sculpture, Edo inspired vessels and painted majolica.
Opening event: Wednesday May 1, 5.oo pm. All welcome.
Image: Random Nature, 2016 by Jeff Mincham. High walled bowl Mid-fired, multi-glazed ceramic H 28cm
Time
1 (Wednesday) 10:00 am - 26 (Sunday) 4:00 pm
Location
Despard Gallery
Level 1, 15 Castray Esplanade, Hobart
Details
Making : The Quiet Voices. An exhibition of ceramics which champions introverts in a world skewed in favour of the ebullient extrovert. An exploration of different kinds of quietness in clay
Details
Making : The Quiet Voices. An exhibition of ceramics which champions introverts in a world skewed in favour of the ebullient extrovert. An exploration of different kinds of quietness in clay and distance between artist, media and artwork.
Opening event: Friday May 3, 8pm. All welcome.
Quiet Voices will be opened by Lisa Fletcher – Acting Head of School Humanities, Associate Professor of English UTAS.
Artists: Neville French, Marita Knutsen, Kate Jones, Damon Moon, Tara Shackell, Lesa Farrant, Sony Manning ,Peter Battaglene, Mitsuo Shoji, Scott Van Tuil.
Curator: Andrea Barker
Artwork: Nitre bush by Lesa Farrant
Time
1 (Wednesday) 10:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Waterside Pavillion
Mawson Place (Harbour end of Argyle St.) Hobart
Details
Artists: Eve Howard, Joanna Lawton, Ian Clare, Andrew Halford, Chris Salmon, Jason McLeod wildisland.tas.com.au
Details
Time
1 (Wednesday) 10:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 3:00 pm
Location
Wild Island
8/33 Salamanca Place
Details
This exhibition will bring together ceramicists & potters from around Tasmania to share the stories inherent in the ceramic sculptures and/or vessels that they make. The narrative of certain works
Details
This exhibition will bring together ceramicists & potters from around Tasmania to share the stories inherent in the ceramic sculptures and/or vessels that they make. The narrative of certain works may lie in how the piece has been made and the particular materials used. Other works may hold a different narrative in that they convey a specific story that has captured the imagination of the maker.
Curator: Dawn Oakford
Artists: Bernadine Alting; Nick Bryce; Carol Buissink; Robin-Mary Calvert; Heather Creet; Christine Crisp; Lynn Hasenkam; Eve Howard; Robert Ikin; Mark Knight; Kate Larby; Mel McCrum; Dawn Oakford; Julie Perry; Robin Roberts; Rynne Tanton; Richard Whitaker & Anna Williams .
Opening event: 6.30pm, Saturday May 4, 2019.
Artwork by Robin Roberts.
Time
1 (Wednesday) 11:00 am - 26 (Sunday) 4:00 pm
Location
Lady Franklin Gallery
268 Lenah Valley Rd, LENAH VALLEY
Details
Constellations Underground explores the materials of the body and of the earth by lutruwita/Tasmanian artists Sinsa Mansell, Jay Song, Luke Aleksandrow, Julia Drouhin and Georgie Vozar. Five artists dig into clay
Details
Constellations Underground explores the materials of the body and of the earth by lutruwita/Tasmanian artists Sinsa Mansell, Jay Song, Luke Aleksandrow, Julia Drouhin and Georgie Vozar.
Five artists dig into clay as a material with the potential to speak about place, bodies and movement, and be shaped into performances, installations and sound.
Opening event: 3rd May 6-9pm with a series of performances unfolding over the course of the night. All welcome.
Artwork: HPHP brightened, Jay Song.
Time
3 (Friday) 6:00 pm - 5 (Sunday) 4:00 pm
Location
Town Hall Underground
Elizabeth St, between Macquarie and Davey, Hobart
Organizer
Constance ARIconstance.director@gmail.com
Exhibitions: Main Triennale venue (PW1, only open during Triennale)
Details
MANIFEST, The Australian Ceramics Association Members Exhibition, presents a diverse collection of work representing the art, craft and design of contemporary Australian ceramics. Gathered from the Torres Strait to Tasmania,
Details
MANIFEST, The Australian Ceramics Association Members Exhibition, presents a diverse collection of work representing the art, craft and design of contemporary Australian ceramics. Gathered from the Torres Strait to Tasmania, from the remote communities of the Central Desert to the major capital cities and made by artists at various stages in their careers, MANIFEST brings together a selection of the best of contemporary Australian ceramics.
Connie Augoustinos, Julie Bartholomew, Alison Milyika Carroll, Kris Coad, Greg Daly, Andrei Davidoff, Honor Freeman, Ebony Heidenreich, Neil Hoffmann, Nicolette Johnson, Annemieke Mulders, Serena Rosevear, Susan Simonini, Zoe Slee, Jimmy Kenny Thaiday, Dawn Vachon, Steve Williams, Alana Wilson and NOT.
Opening event: May 1, 6pm.
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Princes Wharf One
Castray Esplanade, Hobart
01may9:00 am04(may 4)5:00 pmPresenters ExhibitionOPEN: 1-4 May, 9am - 5pmCastray Esplanade, Hobart
Details
All of the headline acts in the one place, this exhibition will give Triennale delegates and the Tasmanian public alike the opportunity to see the work of our national and
Details
All of the headline acts in the one place, this exhibition will give Triennale delegates and the Tasmanian public alike the opportunity to see the work of our national and international guest presenters.
Opening event: May 1, 6pm.
Crosscurrent, 2015 by Sergei-Isupov
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Princes Wharf One
Castray Esplanade, Hobart
Details
From all reaches of the country, ceramic students and enthusiasts will gather their work in the one place in what promises to be an exhibition of diversity and colour.
Details
From all reaches of the country, ceramic students and enthusiasts will gather their work in the one place in what promises to be an exhibition of diversity and colour.
Participating organisations:
Ceramics Arts Queensland; Adelaide Potters’ Club; Top End Potters; Perth Studio Potters; University of Sydney, Sydney College of the Arts; Canberra Potters Society; University of South Australia, School of Art, Architecture and Design; Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology; Slow Clay Centre; Friends’ School, Hobart.
Opening event: May 1, 6pm.
Artwork: by Narelle White, Image by Janelle Low.
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Princes Wharf One
Castray Esplanade, Hobart
01may9:00 am04(may 4)5:00 pmPlace and PlacementOPEN: 1-4 May, 9am - 5pmCastray Esplanade, Hobart
Details
This exhibition presents the work of the Place and Placement panelists and is a visual representation of how each, in their own way, explores either place in their work,
Details
This exhibition presents the work of the Place and Placement panelists and is a visual representation of how each, in their own way, explores either place in their work, or placement in the way their work has developed and is presented.
Artists: Anne Mette Hjortshoj, Nancy Fuller, Kelly Austin, Ben Richardson
Opening event: May 1, 6pm.
Image: tableware for Garagistes by Ben Richardson
Photographer: Johnathon Wherrett
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Princes Wharf One
Castray Esplanade, Hobart
01may9:00 am04(may 4)5:00 pmShare my tableOPEN: 1-4 May, 9am - 5pmCastray Esplanade, Hobart
Details
‘Share my Table’ To invite another into your home - your private sanctuary that bares all truths. To share stories around a table is the ultimate
Details
‘Share my Table’
To invite another into your home – your private sanctuary that bares all truths. To share stories around a table is the ultimate gesture of trust, friendship and kindness. Ceramic Artists Honor Freeman, Shannon Garson, Tania Rollond, Fleur Schell and Avital Sheffer invite you to join them at their tables as they explore the use of ceramic objects to materialise significant stories that have transpired across the table in each of their homes.
The exhibition ‘Share my table’ brings together the distinctive works of five mid-career Ceramic Artists from across Australia. The works of each artist are woven together visually through the use of a humble trestle table. They all share an enduring commitment to their practise which is reflected in their constantly evolving production of ceramic artefacts. Another important commonality is a willingness to share with succeeding generations their unique tacit knowledge, acquired through years of instinctively following their curiosities.
Following the Authentically Mid Career panel discussion in PW1 on Thursday from 3 – 4.30pm there will be Artist Opening Talks at 5pm at the ‘Share my Table’ exhibition. Honor Freeman, Shannon Garson, Tania Rollond, Fleur Schell and Avital Sheffer invite you to join them at their tables as they briefly share with you the concepts behind each of their installations.
Opening: May 1, 6pm.
Artwork: ‘between going and staying’, 2017 by Tania Rollond
Materials: porcelain and midfire clay
Dimensions: h 34cm x w 30cm x d 20cm
Photographer: Tania Rollond
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Princes Wharf One
Castray Esplanade, Hobart
Speakers for this event
-
Avital Sheffer
Avital Sheffer
Notions of fecundity and containment intrinsic to the human form and the natural world animate the making of my ceramic vessels. The embodiment of utility, divinity and beauty in the vessel form is as ancient as the existence of human consciousness. Projected through mythology, language and lived experience, it is an endless source of inspiration, questioning and search. I am engaged in a deeply rewarding process of oscillating in history. Every layer of clay, glaze and print applied, concealing and revealing, moving back yet simultaneously forward in time. click here to go to Avital’s website Portrait: Uri Karem
-
Fleur Schell
Fleur Schell
In 1863 French poet Charles Baudelaire wrote ... “Genius, is no more than childhood recaptured at will.” My children are the inspiration in my work and provide insightful moments of genius as our family live out ordinary and mundane acts of regular life. More recently I have been building fantastical large-scale dioramas that explore the relationships between three-dimensional porcelain characters, found mixed media props and illustrated backdrops. I am so grateful for the infectious joy and unwavering belief in big magic that my children share with me. click here to go to Fleur’s website
-
Honor Freeman
Honor Freeman
Noticing and quietly commemorating the smaller moments that are a constant rhythm of the everyday continues to be a preoccupation in my work. Working primarily in porcelain, I harness the mimetic qualities inherent in clay through the process of slip casting. The works playfully interact with ideas of liquid made solid. The porcelain casts echo the original objects; the liquid slip turns solid forming a skin, and becomes a precise memory of a past form. A ghost. click here to go to Honor’s website
-
Shannon Garson
Shannon Garson
Shannon Garson's work engages with endangered eco-systems, bio diversity and environmental issues through her chosen medium of thrown porcelain and drawing. Her thrown porcelain vessels decorated with intricate drawings exploring the relationship between domestic forms and the infinite variety of striations, spots, and marks found in nature. Over twenty years of studio practice has led her to develop innovative ways of using drawing within the material constraints of ceramics. Shannon exhibits nationally and internationally. click here to go to Shannon’s website
-
Tania Rollond
Tania Rollond
Tania Rollond makes ceramics and drawings. Working in-between representation and abstraction, she makes drawings on (and about) objects to test the limits of recognition and meaning. Tania holds a Master of Fine Arts (Research) at the University of NSW Art & Design and a Bachelor of Arts (Design) from Curtin University. She studied ceramics at the National Art School and has been a lecturer there since 2004, and has also taught ceramics at UNSW and Institutes of TAFE. She has been exhibiting regularly since 2001, and her work is held in the collections of the Bendigo Regional Gallery, Shepparton Art Museum, FLICAM Museum in Fuping, China, and many private collections in Australia and internationally. click here to go to Tania’s website Portrait: Brendan O’Donnell
01may9:00 am04(may 4)5:00 pmHolding SpaceOPEN: 1-4 May, 9am - 5pmCastray Esplanade, Hobart
Details
Holding Space is an exhibition of works old and new by Tasmanian ceramic influencers and educators. It showcases those who have promoted Tasmanian ceramics to the world—and inspired generations. Holding Space presents the
Details
Holding Space is an exhibition of works old and new by Tasmanian ceramic influencers and educators. It showcases those who have promoted Tasmanian ceramics to the world—and inspired generations. Holding Space presents the diversity and quality of Tasmanian ceramics, exploring the impact of Tasmania on ceramic artists, and the impact of their work on the Tasmanian ceramic arts aesthetic.
Curated by Rudolf Sibrava.
Artists: Les Blakebrough, Rynne Tanton, Derek Smith, Ben Richardson, Tim Holmes, Neil Hoffman, David Paul, Ian Clare, Dawn Oakford, Lisa Boyter, Bernadine Alting, Robert Ikin, Penny Smith, Sonia Brough, Peter Deck, Barbara Cauvin, Zsolt Faludi, Marilyn Raw.
Opening event: May 1, 6pm.
Artwork: Blue Platter (2003) by Robert Ikin – 27cm dia.
Image credit: Robert Ikin
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Princes Wharf One
Castray Esplanade, Hobart
01may9:00 am04(may 4)5:00 pmTambayA Triennale special project by BoxplotCastray Esplanade, Hobart
Details
In April 2019, Mark Valenzuela, Pablo Capati, and Babbu Wenceslao will take up residence at the University of Tasmania’s School of Creative Arts to create a collaborative work especially for
Details
In April 2019, Mark Valenzuela, Pablo Capati, and Babbu Wenceslao will take up residence at the University of Tasmania’s School of Creative Arts to create a collaborative work especially for the Triennale. Combining ceramics, sculpture, drawing and performance, Tambay will centre on a small structure that references the street-side stalls common to the artists’ home country of the Philippines.
Street stalls in the Philippines offer a range of inexpensive goods and services. In Tambay, the entrepreneurial ingenuity of street vendors becomes a means to explore a broader culture in the Philippines of making creative use of limited resources. The artists consider the impact of this culture on their own art practices and engagement with clay.
Often incorporating a place to sit, street stalls also act as public spaces where people can gather to talk or rest. The Tagalog word tambay (or istamby) is derived from the English term ‘on standby’ and is commonly used to describe individuals who spend their days hanging out, for lack of work, school or other ‘productive’ activity. InTambay, however, the artists consider the educative function of public spaces such as street stalls, once again drawing parallels between this cultural context and their approaches to art making. Each artist recognises the contribution of informal education to their art practice, which has been facilitated by a cultural context that emphasises spending time with peers and working collaboratively.
Located in the forecourt of PW1 for the duration of the Triennale, Tambay will likewise function as a place for people to gather or take some time out. The artists will be present at the installation, undertaking various daily activities and welcoming visitors to interact them and their work.
Learn more about Tambay and the Boxplot artists.
Supported by:
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Princes Wharf One
Castray Esplanade, Hobart
01may9:00 am04(may 4)5:00 pmPrue Venables – Living Treasure.Castray Esplanade, Hobart
Details
This small centrepiece will celebrate the announcement, in 2018, of Prue Venables as Australian Design Centre 9th Living Treasure - Master of Australian Craft. Opening: May 1, 6pm.
Details
This small centrepiece will celebrate the announcement, in 2018, of Prue Venables as Australian Design Centre 9th Living Treasure – Master of Australian Craft.
Opening: May 1, 6pm.
Time
1 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - 4 (Saturday) 5:00 pm
Location
Princes Wharf One
Castray Esplanade, Hobart
Exhibitions: Northern Tasmania (open for extended dates)
Details
Littoral will be the first major airing for several years of Devonport Regional Gallery’s collection of ceramics, and is timed to coincide with The Australian Ceramics Triennale Tasmania 2019. The works
Details
Littoral will be the first major airing for several years of Devonport Regional Gallery’s collection of ceramics, and is timed to coincide with The Australian Ceramics Triennale Tasmania 2019. The works selected were made by ceramic artists living in Tasmania or who have worked or studied here. The theme of shores has inspired the selection.
Opening Friday 15 March 2019, 6pm, all welcome.
Curated by Marilyn Raw, Ceramics Teacher, TasTAFE, Devonport
Image: Gerald Makin, Ascent, 1983, porcelain, wheel thrown, hand built additions, glaze. DCC Permanent Collection.
Time
March 2 (Saturday) 7:30 am - June 2 (Sunday) 2:00 pm
Location
Devonport Regional Gallery
145 Rooke Street, Devonport
Details
How do we see ourselves and our lives encased within the landscape of Tasmania? Debbie Harman’s work is about how landscape always wears the debate of where human intervention should recede
Details
How do we see ourselves and our lives encased within the landscape of Tasmania?
Debbie Harman’s work is about how landscape always wears the debate of where human intervention should recede or overtake. This includes the artist as a producer of more objects for either posterity or landfill.
Debbie’s evocative pieces are made from hand-formed ceramic components combined with objects she finds washed up on the beaches of North-West Tasmania.
Curated by Marilyn Raw.
Artwork: running by Debbie Harman, ceramic, cans, wood, grit, 40cm x 20cm x 20cm
Time
March 6 (Wednesday) 9:00 am - July 9 (Tuesday) 5:00 pm
Location
Cradle Mountain Wilderness Gallery
3718 Cradle Mountain Rd, Cradle Mountain
Details
With this current exhibition, Placing Things, Kelly Austin continues to question the connections between perception and expectation. The grouping of familiar and ambiguous ceramic objects shifts the generalised contemplation
Details
With this current exhibition, Placing Things, Kelly Austin continues to question the connections between perception and expectation. The grouping of familiar and ambiguous ceramic objects shifts the generalised contemplation invited by still life works into a more forensic exploration of looking. And, as this work also asks, what are the ways in which broader concerns might be signalled through the composition of objects, space and light?
Opening Friday 15 March 2019, 6pm. All welcome.
Image: Kelly Austin, stilled composition no.24, 2017, stoneware, porcelain, glaze, wood, acrylic paint. Photo by Peter Whyte.
Time
March 16 (Saturday) 7:30 am - May 19 (Sunday) 2:00 pm
Location
Devonport Regional Gallery
145 Rooke Street, Devonport
Details
The Potters:Produce exhibition captures the creative journey from paddock to plate, exploring how ceramicists work to design and make tableware for food industry clients. Opening event: April 4, 6pm. Plate by Lisa
Details
The Potters:Produce exhibition captures the creative journey from paddock to plate, exploring how ceramicists work to design and make tableware for food industry clients.
Opening event: April 4, 6pm.
Plate by Lisa Britzman
Image by Jessica Coughlan
Time
April 1 (Monday) 9:30 am - June 9 (Sunday) 3:00 pm
Location
Design Tasmania
Cnr Tamar and Brisbane St, Launceston
Details
The Ceramics Studio at the School of Creative Arts, University of Tasmania, was driven with passion and a love of imaginative expression by the late Professor Vincent McGrath. Vince’s poetic
Details
The Ceramics Studio at the School of Creative Arts, University of Tasmania, was driven with passion and a love of imaginative expression by the late Professor Vincent McGrath. Vince’s poetic understanding of a lived landscape migrated from his journal drawings to the surface and form of his ceramic objects. This retrospective will exhibit paintings that Professor McGrath produced in the fading months of his life alongside ceramic work spanning his career.
Opening event: 5.30 to 7pm Friday 12 April. All welcome.
Artwork: Vincent McGrath
Time
April 15 (Monday) 9:00 am - May 10 (Friday) 5:00 pm
Location
Academy Gallery, University of Tasmania, Inveresk
2 Invermay Road, Launceston
Details
A solo debut show of ceramics and illustrations by Travis Bell Opening event: 4.30pm Wednesday April 24. All welcome.
Details
A solo debut show of ceramics and illustrations by Travis Bell
Opening event: 4.30pm Wednesday April 24. All welcome.
Time
April 24 (Wednesday) 10:00 am - May 8 (Wednesday) 4:00 pm
Location
Powerhouse Gallery
2 Invermay Rd
Details
To be Tasmanian is to be in and of this place. From kunanyi to Cradle Mountain, via the high and low lands between, there is something about Tasmania that touches
Details
To be Tasmanian is to be in and of this place. From kunanyi to Cradle Mountain, via the high and low lands between, there is something about Tasmania that touches one deeply. For the artists in this exhibition, their connection to this land is a source, not only of inspiration, but also material and process. In using the natural materials; stone, mud, kelp, clay from the places they feel close to, these artists invite us to a particular awareness that in turn, asks us to consider the places close to our hearts.
Artists: Jane Bamford, Nanna Bayer, Viv Cutbush, Neil Hoffman, Janny McKinnon, Serena Rosevear, Ben Richardson, Catherine Rogers, Yasmin Smith
Image: Viv Cutbush
Time
April 25 (Thursday) 9:00 am - May 24 (Friday) 5:00 pm
Location
Cradle Mountain Wilderness Gallery
3718 Cradle Mountain Rd, Cradle Mountain