Ceramics Design Gold Award, Yuichi Yanai. Crater Dish. Ceramics Festival 2012 Mino, Japan. |
Ceramic Design, Bronze Award, Kyungmin Lee Motion Series. Ceramics Festival 2012 Mino, Japan |
They include the curated
exhibition, the 2014 Taiwan Ceramic Biennale and two international
competitions, the 2014 Westerwaldpreis in Europe and the International Ceramics
Festival’ 2014 Mino, in Japan. These events are well established on the
International ceramic awards calendar and many clay artists are aspiring to get
their work selected and their country represented.
Ceramic Design, Silver Award, Takashi Nakamura Kokutoukumigousu. Ceramics Festival 2012, Mino, Japan. |
Then there are those established ceramists that have been working for
most of their lives. They have been submitting their work for all three of the major international ceramic
events. They are a cut above the rest and have their sights set much higher –
hoping to win one of the coveted awards and or be adjudicated the overall
winner.
Their winning ceramic piece could be a life changing experience. It will catapult them and their latest
creative output into international ceramic stardom. The grand prize and
numerous merit awards (some of which are featured here) are coveted the world over, especially in the major
ceramic centres of excellence including Asia, Europe, England and America. Asia in
particular has for centuries invested heavily in the development of the craft, art and design clay products. Ceramic Arts, Gold Award, Eri Dewa. Forest. Ceramic Festival 2012. Mino, Japan. |
Ceramic Arts Bronze Award, Ayako Sakuragi Utsuwa no naka no mizu Ceramics Festival, 2012. Mino Japan. |
Special Judges Award. Thomas Hoadley Ceramics Festival, 2012, Mino. Japan |
Stone reflecting the various clays available in Japan |
They have major museums and collections that inform their creative output in various
forms and shapes, including ceramic techniques and methods. The institutions of
teaching and learning associated with these centres of excellence must really
be feeling the pressure to produce winners. Enormous resources are invested in the
ceramic sector in those countries with perfect incubator facilities to
cultivate the next generation of ceramic artists, craftspeople and designers. They
have access to amazing raw materials, the latest technology and reference
material to produce cutting edge ceramic statements and contribute to their
country’s cultural heritage.
International Ceramics festival' 14 Mino, Japan.
First on the list of scheduled ceramic events for 2014 is the deadline
date for the International Ceramics Festival’ 14 Mino, Japan. There is no
specified theme for the competition. However the application form, under the
Theme states, that entries should go beyond traditional concepts in a way that
is imaginative and inspired – one that opens the door to the future of
ceramics.
Application period Friday, Nov, 2013 –
Friday Jan10, 2014.
The deadline date is 5pm on January 10th, 2014 Japan time.
The criteria - follow the link.
Website - follow the link.
There are two categories;
Ceramic Design
Ceramic designs created for planned production, repeated production
(including functional pieces produced by hand or in small quantities).
Ceramic Arts
Ceramic pieces that incorporate creative ideas and techniques.
Pieces
must be new creations that have not been exhibited before. (see below for
details)
Entries may not have been produced for the market as of the date that
the organizers announce the results of the final stage. Entries may not have
been previously exhibited in any newspaper, magazine, event, website, or the
like. Pieces that have been made public in order to secure intellectual
property rights are exempt from this restriction.
The Ceramic Park MINO was built in harmony with the folds of the Azuma
town mountains. It was designed by a world renowned architect, Mr. Arata
Isozaki, and was opened in 2002 as a complex building for industry and culture
with a ceramics theme.
The Museum of Modern Ceramic Art is located in above featured building and is focused on the theme of contemporary ceramic art. It is the only
museum in Japan that collects contemporary works from around the world.
Westerwaldpreis, organized by the Keramikmuseum in Hohr-Hrenzhausen.
Shortly after the deadline date for submissions for the Mino is the submission date for the European
German based Westerwaldpreis, organized by the Keramikmuseum in
Hohr-Hrenzhausen.
The Deadline date for submission of applications including photographs
is 19 January 2014.
Competition information - follow the link.
The competition application form and criteria - follow link.
Awards focus and criteria.
In 2014, five prizes are to be awarded for outstanding ceramic work in
the following areas:
- Saltglaze: stoneware and porcelain: The Hohr-Grenzhausen Municipal Prize.
- Design /serially produced ware
- Vessel/ Form/ Décor
- Sculpture / installation
- Talent Award (up to the age of 35 – b. 1978) (applicable for all the above categories)
2014 Ceramic Taiwan Ceramics Biennale (follow link to previous blog post)
Then
there is the 2014 Taiwan Ceramics Biennale, a curated exhibition by the award
winning curator Wendy Gers. The competition alternates between a crafted
ceramics awards exhibition and a curatorial proposal competition, as explained
in a previous blog post - follow link. Numerous ceramists’ work was incorporated
into her winning project proposal titled "Ceramics
Now: Art, Design & Digital Materiality."
The winner of the grand prize of the 2012 Taiwan Ceramics Biennale for crafted works was Johnson Tsang. (images above, left and below)Follow the link to view the work.
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