Meet the Maker: Tom Raffield

How does it feel to steam bend wood and what feeling do you think it brings to its eventual owners’ homes?

Every single steam-bent piece brings me so much pride. Every bend furthers my respect for the sustainable wood that we use – it delights me that I’m able to reflect the beauty of our Cornish surroundings in a lighting or homeware design, whilst using an ecological method that’s kind to the planet. I love to think that this mesmerising moment is replicated when our customers open their box and take out their newest design at home. The beauty of our scandi-inspired designs is timeless joy – it never loses that feeling of being special.

 

 

You aim to operate a circular design chain by 2024. Could you tell us a bit about the key changes that will involve?

We believe design can be a force for change. Crafting heirlooms of the future, our goal is to make superior quality pieces that are loved, used, and stand the test of time. These heirlooms of the future are the anti-dote to over consumption and as well as sharing this message as loud as we can, we also want to continue to improve the way we work. Along this journey we are looking to prevent the creation of waste and pollution, circulate products and materials for future use, whilst helping to regenerate nature. We are making good progress, but we need all businesses to focus on reshaping our economy and protecting the planet. 

 

What do you think it will take for circular design to become the norm?

I think accountability is the biggest hurdle we are facing at the moment. Plenty of companies, big and small, have proven change can be made to create sustainable, circular design, but we need everyone to take a step back, rethink their processes and be innovative to implement positive change. 

 

 

What role does craft play in your household over the festive period?

Right from when I opened my first tool belt at 7 years old on Christmas morning, the woodworking spark began. To me, nothing shows care more than handmade gifts, and that is why crafting is so dear to the festive period. Whether my children are drawing on Christmas cards, or I am in the workshop working on gifts for loved ones, a handmade gift is from the heart and is a piece of you. 

 

 

Where will you be sourcing your conscious gifts this Christmas?

I’m a big advocate of ‘buy better, buy less’. Every year, I make a mindful effort to gift from small, local companies who carry a sustainable ethos that aligns with my own. Grabbing a hot chocolate from my local café and exploring the great gifts found in various Cornish towns has become part of my Christmas tradition. It’s always nice to chat to fellow small business owners, and I will continue to support them whenever I can.

The November Edit

For so many of us the festive season passes as an all-out frenetic buzz before we allow ourselves to draw breath on Boxing Day morning. In November’s edit we hope to restore a bit of balance throughout the month with a mix of festive events and opportunities to slow down, reflect and savour the experience.

We hope you will all find a quiet moment to enjoy our ‘Meet The Maker’ conversation with progressive sculptural artist and furniture designer Gareth Neal whose 3D printing practice is at the forefront of craft’s evolution today.

For more exceptional craftsmanship throughout the month please follow us on Instagram @londoncraftweek

Craft Capital

Our pick of what to see and do across London over the coming month

Christie’s Lates | The Artisan Edition

Christie’s, SW1, 2nd December, 6-9pm

Celebrate the art of craftsmanship with Christie’s at an evening event brimming with artisan talks, workshops and demonstrations. Helen Chislett, co-author of the newly released book “Craft Britain: Why Making Matters” will lead a panel discussion on the subject. Pocket some interior design tips from Edward Bulmer, marvel at the intricacy of stitching in the hands of Lora Avedian and try your hand at silver hammering, guided by master silversmith Wayne Meeten. 

Image: Laura Avedian at work | Credit: Laura Avedian | Photo by Aloha Bonser-Shaw

 

Searching for Apricity

Flow Gallery, W11, Until 17th January 2023

If ever a word should be brought back to common parlance it’s ‘apricity’. Meaning ‘the warmth of the winter sun’ it conjures the most appealing of seasonal moments. Through their joint exhibition of ceramics and textiles – ‘Searching for Apricity’ – Nancy Fuller and Maria Sigma invite us to slow down and contemplate our experience of the always-changing seasons.  

Image: Nancy Fuller ceramics | Credit: Flow Gallery

 

Paper & Clay by Canopy Collections

Cromwell Place, SW7, 6th-11th December 

London Craft Week is privileged to span multiple worlds, the boundaries between art, craft, design and architecture always being blurred. This ambiguity is embraced wholeheartedly by Francesca Anfossi, one of thirteen international artists brought together by Canopy Collections to explore different perspectives on the material nature of paper and clay. Working in close collaboration with local communities, Francesca’s handmade pieces are inspired by everyday domesticity, resulting in striking objects that flow from the nature of their material and fulfil genuine human needs. Does that make them craft, art or design? We’ll leave you to decide. 

Image: Tamara Van San, Tidal Wave, 2018. glazed ceramic | Courtesy of Canopy Collections

 

The Carpenters’ Line

Japan House London, W8, Until 29th January 2023

Retreat from the pre-Christmas bustle into the woods of the Japanese region of Hida. This exhibition of master woodworking exudes calm, but its subjects pack a punch. They honed and pushed their craft over the course of centuries to build some of Japan’s most famous temples and contribute to the collections of museums around the globe.

Image credit: Japan House London

 

Another Pantry Pop-Up Grocery Store

WC2, Until 1st December

Another Pantry is a contemporary food platform that champions seasonal, slow and conscious cooking. Founder Safia Shakarchi draws together the most thoughtful talents working in food today and brings their products and recipes to a home-cooking audience. For the rest of this month you can get a taste of their favourites at Another Pantry’s Pop-Up Grocery Store in Seven Dials. If you’re keen to don an apron and learn a thing or two, you might just be able to book one of the remaining tickets for Sunday’s Wildfarmed pasta-making workshop with Olivia Cavalli, using planet-pleasing regeneratively farmed flour. 

Image credit: Another Pantry | Photo by Liz Seabrook

Festive open studios and shopping events

Go off-piste to discover extraordinary handmade gifts this Christmas.

Cockpit Winter Open Studios

Bloomsbury, WC1, 24th-27th November & Deptford, SE8 3DZ, 2nd-4th December

This is likely not the first you’ve heard of Cockpit’s Open Studios, and with good reason: It’s the big one. Home to over 160 makers across a wide range of disciplines, we challenge anyone to come away empty-handed. See Beatrice Larkin (@beatricelarkin) pushing the capabilities of a Jacquard loom with woven translations of the blotches and blurred edges in her hand-sketched line drawings; Darren Appiagyei (@inthegrainn) demonstrating true respect for materials in the turning of exotic woods; and meet Majeda Clarke who believes so passionately about the importance of keeping community traditions alive, as she has done in learning from the Jamdhani weavers of Dhaka.

Image credit: Majeda Clarke 

 

Gareth Neal Festive Open Studio

N1, 26th November

A highlight of the De Beauvoir Christmas shopping trail, Gareth Neal will be lighting the fire, mulling the wine and inviting you to browse a selection of handmade wares. In this month’s Meet the Maker interview [link] he also shares that he’ll be putting some of his latest experiments with robot arms and traditional crafts on display.

Image courtesy of Gareth Neal | Photo by Cliqq studios

 

anatomē Christmas shopping event

W1, 3rd-4th December

In the spirit of balance this season, anatomē’s festive weekend promises a moment’s respite from the hubbub. Sip a botanical cocktail while creating bespoke bath oils and salts to gift, or maybe keep.

Image credit: anatome | Photo by Georgia Rudd

 

Studio Pottery London: Makers Christmas Market At Eccleston Yards

SW1, 26th-27th November 

Come for the selection of pottery from twenty ceramicists and leave with a new hobby for 2023. Studio Pottery London supports all lovers of clay with taster lessons for absolute beginners and a mentoring programme for more experienced potters.

Image credit: Studio Pottery London

Meet the Maker

Interview with Gareth Neal

Gareth Neal has been shining brightly on our radars this month. Not only will he open his doors for the festive event detailed above, but his work stars on the cover of ‘Craft Britain: Why Making Matters’. This is a fitting acknowledgement of the important role he is playing in stretching the boundaries of what is understood by craft today. 

We hear from Gareth about challenging notions of craft: “Many would question that if something is made without the hand is it even craft?”. 

We ask how it feels as a maker working with technology-first processes: “What’s so wonderful about the process of printing directly from the computer is the ability to see what you think it’s going to look like prior to committing precious material and resources to its existence.”

Gareth shares what he’s got his eye on across the capital this winter and we talk about the future. Read the full interview on our News page to hear about his dream commission and where the experiments are going next. Spoiler alert: It involves placing traditional craft techniques in the arms of robots.

Image: Gareth making the Zaha Vessels | Courtesy of Gareth Neal | Photo by Petr

Discover more makers and their stories.

 

Meet the Maker: Gareth Neal

Your work features on the cover of the new book ‘Craft Britain: Why Making Matters’. Could you tell us a bit more about the piece and why you think it was chosen?

The book is full of so many people I have a great deal of respect for and I’m sure a lot of their work would have looked great on the cover, so it’s just lovely to have been chosen for this spot. These pieces are slightly otherworldly and really question our notion and take on craft.  Many would question that if something is made without the hand is it even craft? I love the fact that Chislett and Linley are open to exploring the evolution of making, including the tools and methods that craftspeople use. The book itself covers traditional methods of making all the way through to the most advanced technological methods, and these vessels demonstrate that journey from traditional to contemporary that is outlined in the book.

 

 

How does your experience as a maker feel during the process of 3D printing raw sand compared to working hands-on with wood?

What’s so wonderful about the process of printing directly from the computer is the ability to see what you think it’s going to look like prior to committing precious material and resources to its existence. The process is not only exciting, but gives me a real sense of freedom as anything is possible. The added bonus is that you can make endless variations with a few small detail changes. The piece’s form can be evolved by tweaking the drawings until we think we have something really special. From this point I make small prints to evaluate them in the flesh, though this is all divorced from the hand-making process, I get a great deal of satisfaction and pleasure from this ability to respond and not get caught up in the problems of (hand) making, this also frees me up to keep making in the wood workshop on new and experimental works. We will have a collection of wooden objects and sand vessels on display at the open studio to give people a flavour of the variety of work that goes on here at the studio.

 

 

A private client gets in touch regarding a new commission. What’s going to get you excited?

It’s not always the project itself that gets me excited but the type of client. If they love an element within my portfolio and are open to me and my creativity then this is how the best relationships are usually forged. However, I would love a project that worked with a magical and very traditional space where the client was keen to be respectful to its traditions but to put it strikingly on the contemporary map. I would also be interested in collaborating with an architect on a new build, totally developing a space and imagining what could be.   

 

You have an experimental practice and have talked about pushing the limits of what’s possible to create your ‘dream piece’ with the SIO2 ‘1755’. Where do you go from there? 

For the past year, I have been experimenting with recycled plastic and 3d printing polymer with a robot arm, through creating complex models that are inspired by the movements found in traditional craft techniques such as willow weaving and crochet. We have developed new and unique methods for using these tools to build complex open weave forms and structures. Some of the experimental samples from this recycled plastic project will be on show during the festive open studio over the weekend (26th of November) but to see the final things you will have to wait until 2023. 

 

You are hosting your own Festive Open Studio this week; what other cultural happenings have caught your eye across the capital for this winter? 

There are always brilliant cultural events happening across London, whether they are exhibitions, talks, shows there really is something for everyone. In the craft world we see the creation of more maker’s markets each winter, and more open studios taking place with the lead up to Christmas. These are a great place for creatives to show and sell their work across the capital. They are also a reassuring reminder in the number of people who are still making or starting their making career. An exhibition we are excited to see is ‘The Carpenters’ Line: Woodworking Heritage in Hida Takayama’ at Japanese House.

Gareth hosts his festive open studio at 57a Lawford Road on Saturday 26 November, 11am-3pm.

 

Image credits:

Si02 Twisted Pair Sand Vessel – photo by James Champion

Gareth making the Zaha Vessels – photo by Petr

Meet the Maker: Annabel Hood

It’s the second week of Goldsmiths’ Fair, where 136 makers bring together ancient techniques with modern day technologies, from wire work to 3D printing, traditional goldsmithing to intricate engraving.

Exhibiting for the second year this year is young-silversmith Annabel Hood. Part of the Craftmasters family, Annabel creates contemporary silverware designed for the home, which uses surface decoration – including hand engraving, chasing and etching – to prompt conversations on important issues, from visual impairment to climate change.

While at the Fair, we spoke to Annabel about what she will be showing this year and the inspiration behind her latest pieces.

You are currently exhibiting at Goldsmiths’ Fair, can you tell us a little bit about what you are showing there and in particular the series of pieces that explore patterns and formations relating to rock erosion and melting glaciers?

In 2018 I camped on The Outer Hebrides, which coincided with two hurricanes off the coast of America; the 80 mile-an-hour winds soon hit Harris and I was almost blown away! I spent the rest of my holiday thinking about how extreme weather affects our environment. My research into land and glacial erosion brought me to Tom Hegen’s breathtaking aerial photography and his Two Degrees Celsius series has been the main inspiration behind my designs. The dramatic contrast of the turquoise flowing ice melt over pristine white glaciers spoke to me and hand engraving really lends itself to this; when the light catches the engraving it looks like flowing water. The centrepiece of the collection is a silver tea set which resulted from conversations I had with Glaciologist Prof. Peter Nienow over a cup of tea. In Britain having a cup of tea and putting the world to rights is something we are famous for! I like to create functional pieces that can start a conversation.

 

 

What prompted you to explore this subject through your silversmithing practice and how do you see conversations around sustainability relating to craft?

I have always focused on making pieces that are not only beautiful and functional but have a story or message. I am dyslexic, so am aware that not everybody absorbs data in the same way. I wanted to create an accessible visual catalyst to start discussion about the issues I was trying to raise on several levels: the endangering of our environment, and trying to create a circular economy where we can.

It is extremely difficult to be completely sustainable in our craft; much of our industry’s materials come from mining. As climate change is the reason for the inspiration behind my glacial flow series I decided to use 100% recycled silver and Scottish bog oak in this collection, attempting to create as small a footprint as I could. Making my practice more sustainable is a continuous evolution, but worth the effort.

Who or what has been your greatest inspiration?

That is a very difficult question! I don’t think I am ever inspired by just one thing – many different types of artists and designers influence my practice. I think one of my biggest inspirations from my time at school is Katie Paterson. Katie’s work intersects the Science / Art border regularly, which I find fascinating. I vividly remember attending a lecture in Cambridge where she was discussed her Osram Moonlight and Space projects; I was stunned by her ability to visually show ideas that were complex and powerful. Looking back at my work in the last ten years it too has revolved around such issues, from deforestation to the visually impaired. I am always astounded and inspired by what Katie creates, learning about her Future Library project reduced me to tears.

 

 

Are there any particular works at the Fair that you have found especially inspiring in terms of style or technique?

I am always drawn to pieces of work that I look at and think ‘how on earth was that done’! My favourite book is Alice in Wonderland and I think anyone who has an imagination that challenges their practice is inspirational. In past fairs I have been drawn to Nan Nan Liu’s work and how she uses wire to bring her drawings to life. Her candlesticks and menorah blew me away; it is incredible work, particularly the way in which she has soldered all of the wires together so flawlessly. This year I have found Andrew Lamb’s work very inspiring; having his stand next to mine I have been able to  look very closely at his work and it is amazing how he draws down wire to 0.3mm to create incredibly intricate designs. Artists like these who challenge their drawings to become phenomenal pieces inspire me to push my own drawings harder and, in a slightly mad way, push some boundaries in my practice.

What are you looking forward to working on in the year ahead? 

Having completed the tea set I feel a sense of closure on my Glacial Flow series, I have enjoyed working on it the last three years immensely. There are still a couple of pieces I would like to make in the series, including exploring how I could include enamel.

I am looking forward to next year developing my work not just in style but in theme. I am planning on taking a break somewhere quiet where I can focus on some sketchbook work that will inform the next body of work. Dorothy Hogg always reinforced the importance of drawing to my lecturer at the ECA, Susan Cross who in turn encouraged our sketchbook work. I am looking forward to developing my drawings and exploring them in new ways that will inspire my next collection. I would also like to improve my engraving and learn a couple of new styles which I can use in my work.

Annabel Hood is currently exhibiting at Stand 14 at Goldsmiths’ Fair, which runs until 9 October 2022.

 

Meet the Maker: Alice Diaz de Santillana

Can you tell us a little bit about what you will be showing at The Italian Glass Weeks this year, and any new materials or techniques you have used to create these works?

This year I will be showing some of my largest work so far, inspired by Roman columns. All unique pieces, free hand blown, some engraved with different linear patterns. I love the idea of people interacting more with glass by touching it, sitting on it, being creative with it. Glass is a soft and smooth material and strangely has a warm and sensual feel to it. I have also danced freely with other type of sculptures, using very thick fascias of texturised glass. I love to use classical Venetian techniques in my work, there are so many interesting ones that are really worth being preserved.

What have been your main inspirations for this latest body of work?

I spent most of last year in Rome walking around the Roman Forums and looking at these amazing skeletons of the past. Architecture is fascinating, especially when it’s been consumed and aged by time and the natural elements. The way stone and marble react and change their textures and shapes, how they break or chip without ever losing their solidity and grace. With my larger sculptures I wanted to reproduce the feeling of walking in an Archaeological site made of glass elements. Transparent ‘ghosts’ of age and time. My other inspirations came from little elements of which nature is rich: insects.

 

Image: Alice Diaz de Santillana, Stili I, 2021. Free Hand Blown Glass, Engraved. Murano, Italy, 46 x 30cm. Courtesy of Alice Diaz de Santillana and Elizabeth Royer S.R.L.

You have mentioned before that you’ve drawn on skills that you’ve learned in Haute Couture — can you tell us a little more about this and the way it has influenced your practice?

I found so many similarities between Haute Couture and traditional glass making. The importance of teamwork and patience, every little detail is made with so much attention and it is always a collaboration of great knowledge, meaning also lots of tricks for special effects, and I find that fascinating. Glass is a very fragile element, like Couture fabrics, laces and embroidery, but with good care these materials can last for centuries. The transparencies, the illusion of lightness, the plastic three dimensionality that is achieved by layering different types of fabric often times resembles the process of glassmaking. 

You come from a great legacy of artists and designers in glass, but clearly bring your own creativity and style to the medium; is there a dream project that you would like to realise or a new experiment in glass that has yet to be tried?

There are so many experiments that I am looking forward to working on. The next project will definitely be a large installation, as I am very intrigued by the idea of working around the concept of space, bringing more architectural elements into my work. I would love to create something for the outdoors as well, glass and nature are quite an interesting combination. I am very respectful of materials and history, I don’t feel an urge to push the material to necessarily create new things. I prefer to work around the idea of bridging past techniques with modern necessities, in order to create objects or sculptures that are free of the concept of time. 

What are you most looking forward to at The Italian Glass Weeks?

I am always most curious about what the younger artists have created, how they are able to be quite free in their approach to the material, sometimes creating very interesting pieces that feel fresh and new. It’s always interesting to see how the past is perceived and interpreted with an eye towards the future. I like to see how a really old practice can be given a new life by a fresh perspective. I am also intrigued by the contamination that glass will have with other media, other materials. And of course, I want to see the big Venini light installations at Le Stanze del Vetro. My ancestors are always a great source of inspiration for me.

The Italian Glass Weeks take place in Milan from 10-18 September and Venice, 17-25 September 2022.

The Summer Edit

Summer is well and truly with us and so this edit includes our pick of exhibitions and events to enjoy in the sunshine in some of the world’s most beautiful landscapes, as well as our selection of material driven artists and works to see now across the UK.

Following the success of the Loewe Craft Prize exhibition in Seoul, which closes this weekend, the Loewe Foundation is once again opening applications for this prestigious award. If you think this could be your year then see further details below.

Image: Mèlisses, Andros, where Maria Sigma will be holding a weaving retreat this October.

Culture Fix

Discover our pick of exhibitions and events across the UK

Born from Earth, Richard Saltoun Gallery

Richard Saltoun Gallery presents Born from Earth, a group show that brings together ceramics by 11 contemporary artists, from pioneers of the craft to emerging artists pushing forward the medium today. The exhibition features a bespoke display designed by Lisa Chan, founder of It’s a Local Collective, transforming the gallery into an earthen landscape and creating a dialogue between art and architecture.

Image: Installation View, ‘Born from Earth’, Photography by Ben Westoby. Courtesy Richard Saltoun Gallery London and Rome.

Find out more

Festival of Quilts, NEC Birmingham, 18-21 August

In Translations: Trans-Atlantic and other Journeys, acclaimed quilter Michael A. Cummings applies his signature style to explore and imagine the African diaspora experience, as he has so memorably done throughout his extensive craft career. Using found objects, applique techniques, and his characteristically dynamic palette, Cummings’ exhibition will be a highlight at this annual international event.

Image: Michael A. Cummings, ‘James Baldwin: Born Into A Lie’, 2019. Courtesy Michael A. Cummings.

Find out more

Ruth Asawa: Citizen of the Universe, Modern Art Oxford, until 21 August

Don’t miss Citizen of the Universethe much anticipated exhibition of works by the visionary artist, educator and activist Ruth Asawa. The exhibition features her signature hanging sculptures in looped and tied wire, and celebrates her holistic integration of art, education and community engagement by displaying prints, drawings, letters and photographs.

Image: Ruth Asawa Working on a Wire Sculpture at her Saturn Street Home, 1957. Photograph: Imogen Cunningham. © 2022 Imogen Cunningham Trust. Courtesy David Zwirner.

Find out more

 

In the Black Fantastic, Hayward Gallery, until 25 September

In the Black Fantastic, now on at the Hayward Gallery, features works by 11 artists, including Nick Cave, Sedrick Chisholm and Kara Walker. Blending myth, spiritual tradition, Afrofuturism, and science fiction, the show reveals how fantasy becomes a zone of creative and cultural liberation and a means of addressing racism and social injustice. A landmark exhibition.

Image: Installation view of Nick Cave works, ‘In the Black Fantastic’. Courtesy Hayward Gallery.

Find out more

 

Travel Diary

 

Hauser & Wirth Menorca, Illa del Rei, Menorca, on view until 13 November 

Art, education and conservation are brought together on Illa del Rei. Alongside the gallery buildings – repurposed from 18th-century outbuildings of a naval hospital – and immersed in the natural landscape of Illa del Rei, works by Spanish masters Joan Miró and Eduardo Chillida feature together with sculptures by modern icons Louise Bourgeois and Franz West as well as a new commission from Martin Creed.

Image: Franz West, ‘Autostat’, 1996 © Archiv Franz West © Estate Franz West Private collection. Courtesy Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Daniel Schäfer.

Find out more

Between Humankind and Nature, Istanbul ’74, Bodrum, until 10 September

Spread across the distinctive natural setting of the Aegean Riviera, Between Humankind and Nature, presented by Istanbul ’74, seeks to explore and nurture the creativity and artistic collaboration inherent to the cultural textures of this ancient location. Discover ceramics, sculptures, site-specific installations and collectible design pieces by national and international artists in crafts and cultures from around the world and across generations.

Image: Installation view of Cristián Mohaded works, ‘Between Humankind and Nature’. Courtesy Istanbul ’74.

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Spool of Golden Thread, Andros, Greece, 20-23 October 

Award-winning weaver Maria Sigma cites the Cycladic landscape of Andros, Greece, as a continuous source of inspiration. Join her for an island retreat at Mèlisses, Andros, where you can learn the art of both frame and band weaving while soaking up the last of the summer sun.

Find out more

Marguerite Escape, St Ives, Cornwall, 15-17 August

Join Marguerite, the club for women and non-binary people in the creative industries, for an escape to St Ives, Cornwall. Discover the natural landscapes that inspired Barbara Hepworth’s modernist sculptures, visit Tate St Ives and enjoy a stay at Harbour View House.

Find out more

Loewe Craft Prize 2023

Now open for applications

We’re pleased to share that LOEWE has opened submissions for the LOEWE FOUNDATION Craft Prize 2023, which will take place in New York in spring next year.

The LOEWE FOUNDATION Craft Prize was launched in 2016 to showcase and celebrate excellence, artistic merit and originality in modern craftsmanship, but the incentive for the prize goes back to LOEWE’s beginnings as a collective craft workshop in 1846.

Originally conceptualised by LOEWE’s creative director Jonathan Anderson, the award aims to acknowledge the importance of craft in today’s culture and to recognise working artists whose talent, vision and innovative approach set a standard for the future.

‘Craft is always going to be modern. It is about creating objects that have a formula of their own and speak their own language, creating a dialogue that didn’t exist before. It is about newness as much as it is about tradition.’  Jonathan Anderson, Creative Director, LOEWE.

Entries to the sixth edition of the prize will be accepted until 25 October 2022.

Find out more

We are hiring a Programme Coordinator!

An exciting opportunity has arisen to join the London Craft Week team as Programme Coordinator.

Having recently successfully recruited a new Programme & Sales Manager, we are looking to expand our team with a confident individual with relevant sales experience, strong communication skills and meticulous attention to detail.

The successful candidate will join our small but dynamic team, playing a key role in delivering the annual city-wide festival celebrating exceptional creativity and craftsmanship from around the world.

To apply, please supply a CV in addition to a covering letter explaining in no more than 500 words how your skills and experience match the requirements of the role.

Please send your application to info@londoncraftweek.com. The closing date for applications is midnight on Wednesday 14 September.

View the Job Description and Person Specification via the link here.

 

Photo credit Dan Weill Photography

Meet the Maker: Interview with Kate Malone MBE

Following the success of the second FiredUp4 charity auction, we sat down for a chat with esteemed ceramicist and shortlisted nominee for the LOEWE Foundation Craft Prize 2022, Kate Malone MBE. In this special interview for LCW, you can discover more about Kate’s practice and the importance of putting clay into the hands of young people:

Kate, congratulations on the recently concluded FiredUp4 auction, the second charity fundraiser that brought together work by the UK’s leading ceramicists to raise funds for the provision of pottery studios, equipment and training at OnSide Youth Zones. The project, which you instigated, aims to install and provide teachers with the resources to put clay into the hands of young people around the UK, allowing them to enjoy the benefits of pottery.

Can you tell us a bit more about the origins of FiredUp4 and where the innovative idea for the charity auction came from?

After various conversations with collector Keith Seeley, he and his associate Neale Graham invited me to be Ceramic Ambassador for the fabulous OnSide Youth Zones.

We cooked up the idea of asking UK ceramic artists to donate a piece of work, with the concept of auctioning them to raise money to build studios and to then staff them. After considering different auction houses we settled on Maak – the online auction house for studio ceramics. Maak have been fantastic for the past couple of auctions, supporting us all the way and beyond. The artists were amazing, and were really responsive to giving beautiful pieces of their own work for auction for this project. As ceramic makers, we have all been very concerned about the lack of attention given to teaching craft skills in schools. So our concept was to take direct action; rather than sitting around worrying about it, to do something constructive.

 

Since the introduction of FiredUp4, over 250 young people at Inspire, Chorley Youth Zone and Wigan Youth Zone have experienced pottery, many for the first time, and there are three more studios planned using funds from the second auction. What impacts have you seen first hand, and what is next for FiredUp4?

The impact is clear: the joy of making and the confidence-building from experiencing the transformation from soft tactile material to hard ceramics is extraordinary. I am not on the ground with the studios in Wigan and Chorley and whilst I love spending time with children, I have had to be hard on myself and economical with my time. I have spent a third of my working time over the last couple of years on this project, focusing on fundraising which is where I feel my input is currently most constructive.

I believe in the benefits of making with clay, having been lucky enough to have had a government education that supported developing craft skills and I feel it is my pleasure to put back into the young community.

As to what is next for FiredUp4, the core team are going to meet over the summer to decide a way forward. So far, for obvious reasons, we have asked makers whose work is of higher value to contribute, but I don’t feel that we can keep asking the same people and also many more ceramic makers have wanted to contribute to our objective. So we really have to knock our heads together to come up with a new plan or develop our previous action in a new way.

What is sure is that I would like to provide a way in which all makers can help the young of today. I would dream that every maker, if they are so inclined, might send a little bit of money every time they sell a pot or have a successful exhibition. There are thousands of makers in the UK now, especially after the surge in interest in making with clay – it is the new meditation or yoga – and working with clay is infectious. I would like to think that we can give a callout to all makers to take direct action and help get the money for FiredUp4 to action our manifesto for young people to benefit. They need it now more than ever.

 

Clay session at the Firedup4 Inspire Onside YouthZone clay studio, Chorley Photo: Courtesy Inspire YouthZone

 

Is there anything you’ve learned from the young people participating in these classes? Has it changed your own practice in any way?

No, sadly I have not been able to participate in too many classes yet – I would like to think that I will be more involved as we move forward. The main thing is that we are as effective as possible, as the young of today really need this exciting medium which provides sanctuary and stimulation. It builds confidence and is fun. To use the hands in a constructive, tangible way makes a better, more aware and rounded person.

 

Your powerful stoneware piece, ‘Magma Interrupted’ has been shortlisted for the LOEWE Foundation Craft Prize 2022. The work combines geometric forms, flat planes and sharp angles with a dynamic crystalline glaze, rather than the typically fecund curved surfaces and forms of your work. What was the inspiration behind this piece? Does it signal a new approach to your practice?

It is a great honour to have been shortlisted and to be part of this extraordinary project. The LOEWE Foundation, having run the prize for five years, has created an inspiring initiative that is raising the bar for the craft sector on an international scale and encouraging respect for skill, tradition and innovation.

My work is based on the subject of nature. At one stage it was about the sea, then it was about the nature of the earth – such as seeds, plants, fruits, and vegetables, and for the past 10 years I have also ventured into a more abstract interpretation of nature as part of the evolution of my forms.

The Magma piece that has been shortlisted for this prize is still about nature – crystal formations, geology, geometry, and nature of the underworld. Deep in the earth’s crust there is a bubbling molten lava creating crystalline forms all of the time; nature at the very core of this planet. This series of work does look very different with its flat plains and sharp edges, compared to the fecund, generous gourd and pumpkin shapes, but in fact the inspiration and subject is the same: nature and its ‘life force’.

I have in fact been making these geometric Magma pieces and exhibiting them with Adrian Sassoon, my exclusive art dealer, for some years, however they have not really been seen in many public exhibitions. I’m pleased to say that Sassoon sells them quite quickly, so people think that they are new when in fact they have been trickling through as a series alongside my more recognisable naturally inspired pieces. I have worked in the past with architects on the built environment, and I think that perhaps the effect of looking at the flat planes that are common to buildings has also had an effect on this series of pieces.

 

‘Magma Interrupted’, 2019 by Kate Malone Photo: Sylvain Deleu, Courtesy Adrian Sassoon

 

You’re currently in Seoul, where the winner of the LOEWE Foundation Craft Prize 2022 will be announced on 30 June, followed by an exhibition of all 30 artists with shortlisted works at the Seoul Museum of Craft Art. Looking ahead to the rest of the year, are there any exciting upcoming projects or commissions that you can share with us?

I am beyond excited, as I’ve seen the preparations for the exhibition and the opening party at the Seoul Museum of Craft Art. I am now travelling with my husband and daughter to the south to absorb more of this extraordinary country and culture.

As for the rest of the year, in August I am working with a wheel thrower towards making a set of supersized ceramic gourd pots. Russell Gibbs of Cheddar Gorge Pottery is a superbly skilled practitioner, and I am looking forward to working with him for the second time on this new range of pieces.

As always, I will be exhibiting my work with Adrian Sassoon at Masterpiece next week in London. I very much enjoy being on the exhibition stand with the Sassoon team, however as I’m in Korea I will be sadly missing out on that great pleasure this year. I will also be exhibiting with Sassoon in New York and London in the autumn.

Alongside developing FiredUp4 and making studio pottery in my new studios in Kent, I am developing an educational archive with a record of my studio ceramics and the public artworks that I have undertaken over the last 40 years. A lot of people don’t realise that I make large-scale pieces for the public domain for schools, hospitals, libraries, parks and buildings. This is going to be carefully documented in my archive. I also plan to make video masterclasses which will be available on my recently updated website.

My objective is to share the pleasures of making, and the experience that I have gained from over 40 years of working with clay. The ceramic field as a whole in the UK is incredibly kind and open, and ready to share knowledge and resources. Hooray for clay!

 


Featured image: Kate at her Kent studio Photo: courtesy of Adrian Sassoon by Sylvain Deleu

We are hiring a Programme & Sales Manager!

An exciting opportunity has arisen to join the London Craft Week team as our Programme & Sales Manager.

We are looking for a confident individual with strong sales experience, exceptional communication skills and meticulous attention to detail. The successful candidate will join our small but dynamic team, playing a key creative role in delivering the annual city-wide festival celebrating exceptional craftsmanship from around the world.

To apply, please supply a CV in addition to a covering letter explaining in no more than 500 words how your skills and experience match the requirements of the role.

Please send your application to info@londoncraftweek.com. The closing date for applications is midnight on Wednesday 20 July.

View the Job Description and Person Specification via the link here.

 

 

 

Image by Dan Weill Photography