Work by South African natives highlights an international pottery symposium

LAKEVILLE — Two drastically different styles of South African pottery will be featured in an exhibit entitled “Clay: The Art of Earth and Fire” at The Hotchkiss School’s Tremaine Gallery through June 12. The first style is a traditional Zulu technique of pottery, which is handmade and pit fired. The creations are traditional “beer pots,” which are often used in spiritual ceremonies. The second is an entirely modern approach that incorporates the color and culture of the Zulu people, created by the Ardmore school of artists. These pieces are intricately designed, featuring complex sculptures of animals and colorful and delicate painting. The exhibit was put together by Judith Crouch, who is the wife of Head of School Malcolm McKenzie; and Hotchkiss art teacher Delores Coan. McKenzie and Crouch are from South Africa.Crouch’s college professor, Juliet Armstrong, was the link between the Lakeville boarding school and the potters of South Africa. Armstrong is professor of ceramics at the Center for Visual Arts at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg.Coan travels around the world in search of indigenous potters, and made her first trip to South Africa in March 2009. On that trip she met with Armstrong and together they took an excursion to a remote location “in the bush” to meet the potters there. “It was far out and exciting,” Coan said. “Women started coming out of this open vast land, one by one, all with pots in their hands and on their heads. I felt like I’d died and gone to heaven.” After their journey into the bush, she went to the school of Ardmore Ceramics, where she met Fée Halsted, its founder. Plans for this exhibit began to take shape in August 2010, when Coan revisited South Africa and toured many villages to find potters and their work. The pots from Ardmore were shipped to a gallery in New York City and then trucked up to Hotchkiss. The fruits of Coan’s and Crouch’s hard work is on display at the Tremaine Gallery, which is free and open to the public Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m.The show kicks off with a gallery talk on Thursday, May 5, at 7 p.m. A highlight of the exhibition will be an international symposium on pottery on Saturday, May 14, and Sunday, May 15. There will be lectures, demonstrations and a firing of pots on Sunday. All events are free and open to the public. Visitors will get a chance to meet and speak with many of the artists.

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