Penland School of Craft: There's No Substitute for the Handmade Mug

penland auction

Have you registered for the 35th Annual Penland Benefit Auction yet? 

It will be Penland’s first ever online auction, and also their first auction to last a full week long! Tickets are available now to join us for this virtual celebration and support Penland's ongoing mission of creativity, community, growth, and word-class craft education. Penland is offering two ticket options this year—the "party" option includes access to silent and live auction bidding, a printed auction catalog, a handmade mug like those above, and other Penland party favors to bring the festivities right to your door.

Mark your calendars for August 1-8, and register now to join us there!

Register for the Auction
Kimberly Michelle Shelton (left) and Amanda Ann Palmer at Penland with a selection of their mugs

Kimberly Michelle Shelton (left) and Amanda Ann Palmer at Penland with a selection of their mugs

A note from the Penland School of Craft: The past couple months have shown us how many things can transition to an online format, from Northlight slide nights to our Board of Trustees meeting. But we also know that there's no substitute for the presence and materiality of a handmade object, and that's why we knew without a doubt that we wanted to keep up the tradition of handmade auction mugs. This year's are an especially beautiful collection of hand-thrown, decorated, and glazed pieces. Each one—500 in all!—was designed and made by Kimberly Michelle Shelton of Dirt Dobber Wares (Atlanta, GA) with assistance from Amanda Ann Palmer (Hartland, VT).


One thing we especially love about these mugs is how they each display a unique personality while maintaining an impressive cohesion as a group—sturdy, inviting, earthy, and rich. Scrolling through a few of Kimberly's process photos is a telling window into how much thought went into these designs. We love this look at the various glazes and clay bodies she tested, as well as these close-ups of her approach to geometric patterning and glazing.

Thank you, Kimberly and Amanda! We know these mugs will add an extra special touch to auction week in August and many, many mornings to follow.

FASHIONADO

Jason Wu collaborates WILD BEAUTY Exclusive Florals

Today, 1-800-Flowers.com®, one of the world's leading floral providers, announced it has collaborated with global design talent, Jason Wu, to release an exclusive assortment of modern and elegant bouquets. The Jason Wu for Wild Beauty collection, which is now available nationwide, features on-trend arrangements that embody the designer's signature aesthetic of femininity and sophistication. Behind-the-scenes content, specially designed 'thank you' notes and the ability to preview select bouquets in 3D will allow customers to have an immersive digital experience as they are introduced to the new collection. This marks Jason Wu's first collaboration with a floral and gifting brand.

"Jason Wu is one of the world's most renowned fashion designers and we are thrilled to collaborate with him on this truly original collection, which reflects his unique point of view in floral design and bouquet presentation," said Valerie Ghitelman, Vice President, Product Development and Design, 1-800-Flowers.com. "We are excited to not only share these beautifully crafted arrangements with our customers, but to engage them with distinctive content that provides insights into Jason's design influences and more."

"Playing a role in the intimate decision of what one chooses to wear each day is such an important part of what I do," said Jason Wu. "To extend this concept to the graceful details people bring into their homes is an honor. This collection with 1-800-Flowers.com is especially meaningful to me because of my lifelong love of flowers. Floral elements continuously inspire me and have been a consistent theme throughout my entire career. I'm thrilled to celebrate the beauty of flowers in this new and special way."

A Collection Influenced by Jason Wu's Design Aesthetic: Jason's design influences, such as modern femininity and refined style, are reflected throughout the entire Jason Wu for Wild Beauty collection. Chic, gathered arrangements include freshly cut flowers – such as roses, sunflowers, gerbera daisies, thistle, aster and mini calla lilies, among others – that are grown with love at select eco-friendly, sustainable farms. Each bouquet, which includes a mix of textures and florals unique to the season, arrives wrapped in white kraft paper and is nestled inside a signature gift box. Customers can also opt to order a galvanized flower pail to showcase their arrangement. The collection includes:

Bouquets from the Jason Wu for Wild Beauty collection come with a custom hangtag, which prompts recipients with a QR code to enjoy a mobile web experience. Exclusive and engaging content includes behind-the-scenes footage from Jason's Ready-To-Wear Fall 2020 New York Fashion Week Show and the Jason Wu for Wild Beauty collection photo shoot, both of which took place earlier this year. It also provides access to special 'thank you' notes whereby bouquet recipients can instantly connect with and send a digital message to the sender. Find all this at www.1800flowers.com/jasonwu-connect.

FASHIONADO

The Princess and The Platypus Foundation Presents The Princess Diana Museum

The largest collection of Princess Diana's personal historical items in the world currently on display, online 24/7. The only Diana online museum that contains over 1,700 carefully curated iconic, personal and historical artifacts spanning Diana's lifetime from early childhood through her tragic death. Displayed in a 3D interactive environment, the artifacts depict her incredible life and reveal her enduring legacy.

Once inside the museum, a real time location map and virtual avatars will guide you through the museum in English or Spanish. An exclusive community chat and video feature will enable visitors to share experiences in real time to create a sense of belonging. In addition, over 40 exclusive interviews with Diana's friends, designers, artists and closest collaborators will give you a unique insight of one of the biggest icons in modern history. We hope this virtual journey will unite people from all around the world and inspire a desire to treat others with kindness and to help others while expecting nothing in return just as Princess Diana once did.

"With the sudden rise of COVID-19 virus forcing us to practice 'social distancing,' we are making access to Princess Diana's Museum completely free for one month. This will not only help take people's minds off of all the bad news out there but it will help them connect with each other since users can interact in the museum environment and give back in Diana's honor", Renae Plant and Livinio Stuyck founders at The Princess & The Platypus Foundation said.

The museum works perfectly with your internet broadband connection, any operating system PC/Mac/iOS/ Android on any popular desktop, laptop or tablet internet browser. Mobile phones are not supported due to the large extent of graphical elements and information rendered.

FASHIONADO

Penland School of Craft Summer Workshops

Penland School of Craft is a magical place that I’ve written about many times before. I’ve lived there, studied there and have been an active supporter for three decades so it’s heartbreaking to share this letter from the director. Safety first, I get it. And respect their decision… Visit their website and when they reopen this Fall, consider attending. It may change your life: https://penland.org/

Dear Penland friends, 

With a good bit of sadness, I am writing to tell you that we have decided to cancel all of our summer 2020 workshops. As we learn more each day about the COVID-19 pandemic, it has become clear that continuing to plan for workshops anytime this summer is not in the best interests of our community. 

Our workshops are based on small groups of people coming together and working in close proximity. We work with our hands, and we share information with our hands. We pass things around so everyone can examine them. We use common tools, materials, and work spaces and eat together in a common dining room. Community and sharing are the heart of Penland’s workshop education. We don’t believe that the current public health crisis will change how we teach, but taking a break right now seems like the only responsible course of action. 

We have just finished planning a series of exciting workshops for fall 2020 and spring 2021. We will announce these in the next few weeks and hope to be able to run them. In the meantime, North Carolina is under a stay-at-home order, and most of our staff are working from home. A small crew is on campus and keeping an eye on things. We are all trying to think about how we can use this time to make Penland an even stronger creative force in the future, and we trust you will be part of that future.

If you have questions about summer cancellations or future enrollment, please contact the registration office at registrar@penland.org

We are grateful for your interest in the special kind of education Penland offers, and we hope to see you here before too long. Stay safe, make things, wash your hands, and keep in touch.

Mia Hall, director

Penland School of Craft fashionado

FASHIONADO

BEYOND THE CATWALK BOOK LAUNCH

Last night, at the Jennifer Balcos Gallery in Buckhead, DOTC Foundation and Fashionado founder, E. Vincent Martinez hosted the book release and signing of his photo book, Beyond The Catwalk, to a packed house.

His vision of creating editorial quality fashion images was realized by a very talented team, co-lead by Martinez’s colleague and friend, Taylor Bareford. Both worked with emerging fashion designers, photographers and professional stylists and models to bring to life a collection of photographic images, with dogs, all shot on location at Atlanta’s Goat Farm.

In the Fall of 2018, a conversation was had between the President of the Art Institute of Atlanta and fashion professor E. Vincent Martinez about creating a stylish, philanthropic event to benefit the Doggies on the Catwalk Foundation [DotC] – a 501 c3 that supports pet-based organizations.

The concept behind Beyond The Catwalk was to style and create high-fashion images using garments designed by emerging student designers and to feature dogs with professional models. Photography professor, Taylor Bareford, who was an instrumental collaborator in this project, worked closely with Martinez on all aspects of art direction and production. Bareford and Martinez share a like-minded aesthetic and sensibility which brought forth an organic and contagious synergy to the project. The shooting schedule spanned over four weeks between January and February of 2019 and involved a team of photographers, designers, stylists, pets and their owners.

Beyond The Catwalk exceeded all expectations. The images are beautiful, dramatic and engaging – not an easy feat when you consider that dogs are inherently cute and we weren’t going for “cute.” One of the educational goals of the project was to offer a real-world experience to the students by taking them out of the classroom, shooting on location and allowing them to communicate their vision with the professional team.    

The mission of the Doggies on the Catwalk Foundation (DotC) is two-fold. DotC is a 501c 3 that provides financial assistance to non-profit organizations whose mission is to enhance the lives of individuals living with disabilities and other special needs, and to those organizations who provide safety and loving homes to animals in need. In addition to supporting non-profit organizations, because Doggies on the Catwalk was created in the classroom, we are committed to providing educational assistance through the form of grants to arts education and fashion design programs. Proceeds from the sales of Beyond The Catwalk benefit the organization.

You can purchase your Beyond The Catwalk book HERE.

FASHIONADO

Cosmic Monologues with Artist Gwen Cates

International artist, Gwen Cates, spends her time between Virginia and California. She began painting in the 1960s and has had art exhibits in Britain and the United States. She describes herself as a contemporary colorist, creating experimental and playful abstract paintings in acrylic, often with collage elements. The images have been inspired and grew out of earlier plein air landscapes and figurative work.

Gwen calls the current series of paintings “Cosmic Monologues.” Going deeper into her subconscious and the world of dreams, Gwen reveals fantasies from her imagination. She creates archetypal images and incorporates winged figures, horses and other animals in her compositions. Swatches of fabric, lace, gold leaf and lichen from oak trees are some of the elements that are included in the paintings.

Gwen Cates invites you to her new solo exhibit on November 9th . Her artwork can be viewed on her website: www.gwencates.com / http://www.gwencates.com/biob.htm

What was it like moving from Santa Ynez Valley in California to your new home, the Whiskey Ridge Farm near Charlottesville?

It is important in life to remake yourself every decade or so. When I look at the entirely of my body of artistic work you can see my phases of evolution and personal development. I am a native Virginian and lived and worked here most of my life. I grew up on a farm in Cumberland County and loved painting landscapes and animals. When I went to Art College at Richmond Professional Institute (now called Virginia Commonwealth University) in Richmond, I began painting nudes. This was an exciting phase, and when I met my husband Bill Cates, I remember thinking that he was rather like Adonis. Over the years I became well established as a painter in Virginia, and also in Britain, where I had successful shows of a more metaphysical and mythical nature. When we made the move to California, I needed to use a new color palette. The landscape of Santa Ynez is chaparral, so I had to use warm browns and new earth tones. I was also close to the Pacific Ocean, and so I found new blue tints and hues. I was warmly welcomed into the Southern California art world, becoming active in the Santa Ynez and Santa Barbara art scenes, and I continue to exhibit there. I enjoy the freedom and expanse that the West Coast offers, which is different from the more settled and traditional landscapes of Virginia. I like being free to paint what inspires me regardless of the location. Since I have children on both coasts, I still travel between Virginia and California. This also means that I have a variety of places to exhibit my work, and I get to dance between form and freedom.

After 17 years in California, my husband Bill Cates decided to retire from winemaking, and return to Virginia full time. In the summer of 2015, we bought a lovely farm on a river near Charlottesville, VA. We built a studio in a pole barn near our house and stable. Unfortunately, my husband was in poor health and passed away in 2018. I then went through a difficult period of adjustment and could not focus on my paintings, which lasted for about a year. It was when I started looking at the images of Black Holes that my creative impulse began to return to me. Painting these images has healed me from loss, and in my art studio I have discovered a new way of seeing the world. It is very colorful!

For over 17 years you have been exhibiting your works of art. Has there ever been a painting that you’ve sold in which you wish would have perhaps kept for yourself?

My artwork is in houses and institutions all across the United States, and also Britain. I am thrilled that friends and family across the globe love my work, and collect my paintings. It gives me a sense that I am part of an ever-evolving community of people who trust in the creative universe. There are some paintings that really speak to me that are hard to let go of, because so much of me is in them. One painting in particular, Golden Kite, acrylic with gold leaf and collage elements, is very dear to me, but I did sell it. To me the painting represents our ability to soar above the issues of the world and reach for higher ideals. Fortunately, my cousin, Emmett Richardson, bought the painting and I am happy that he has it. It gives me great joy to visit the homes of people who own and display my work and see the paintings on display.

Your new series of paintings “Cosmic Monologues” is truly amazing, what was the inspiration behind the black holes that you are depicting in your art?

Astronomers have created the Event Horizon Telescope, which is able to reach far into the Cosmos and show images of the colorful auras that surround and encircle Black Holes. Looking at the photographs, I realized that could be an adventure that would help to bring me out of the darkness that I had experienced since my husband of 57 years passed away. I resonated with the Black Holes, because I was experiencing grief, emptiness and was in a metaphorical black hole. I do have basic trust in the nature of life. I knew that eventually the creative force that has always been my friend would return to me. Once I felt ready for a new experience and adventure, I explored astonishing new shapes that came to me out of the potent blackness of my dreams and visions.

Even though I had to endure many days of grief after my husband passed away, I also had the unique opportunity of resting in the unknowable silence, the dark mystery, until the creative urge returned to me. And then it came! After seeing the Black Hole images, I started to enjoy exploring archetypal images with acrylic collage, gold leaf and natural materials. Then as I continued to follow the scientific images of Black Holes in the news, I also became drawn to other exciting phenomena, such as exoplanets. Many of these potent and colorful images will be included in the exhibit.

At 79, I am free to be myself. I understand that self-inquiry is ongoing, and that the creative journey never ends. The Cosmic Monologue and Black Hole series of paintings is my journey from absence to consciousness, from death to life. It is a dialogue with the mysteries of the universe, which always astonishes. I am excited about this new body of work and the upcoming exhibit with Salon @ the Granada. I invite you to come and re-make yourself also in this changing world. Ask yourself this question: what is my current cosmic monologue?

How do you come up with the color pallets when you decide to start a new series? In your new series we find deep oranges, reds and yellows, how did these colors inspire you?

Before I paint, I generally turn music on in my studio and enter a meditative state. Artists learn to dream consciously, and so I enter into a dialogue with my muses. After that, I take out a canvas and my brushes. Sometimes I am inspired by a landscape, while at other times I am painting a dream or vision from my internal world. Colors inspire me. I love playing with brilliant oranges, reds and yellows against deep blues and the almost black hue of Payne’s Gray. Long ago, while studying fine art, I was admonished by my professors for using pallets that were “too hot”.  I am a bit of a rebel, so the feedback did not deter me. At the time I identified with the French impressionistic painters who used such strong colors that they were referred to as the Fauves, the wild beasts. There is also a living wildness within my psyche. I enjoy using a hot pallet and feel that this has been to my advantage when artistically envisioning the Event Horizons and Eccretion Discs of Black Holes featured in my current work. After all, the first time human beings saw a photo of a black hole was this year! I have heard from several art critics, that the vibrant colors used in my current work add to the richness and depth of “Cosmic Dialogues.” This new color pallet also invites the observer into their own creative exploration and creative inner dialogue.

You have an event in L.A. coming soon, are you excited about showcasing your work back in the West Coast Talk to us a little about what your fans can expect.

Cosmic Monologues is an ongoing exploration of archetypal images that are revealed to me as I paint. I am not done yet! At this point in my art career and my life, my goal is to express deep-seated archetypal images drawn from earlier landscapes and figurative paintings.  My goal is to transform these concepts through rich and vibrant color and strong compositions to create powerful and imaginative paintings.  My goal is to astonish myself and to share this sense of wonder with others.

Opening on November 9th  and lasting for one-month, I will present a solo exhibit. Cosmic Monologues takes us on a journey between absence and consciousness. In the spring of this year, when astronomers captured an image of a Black Hole for the first time, I was astounded by the images from the Event Horizon Telescope. After all, Black Holes had previously been unobservable. I was so inspired that I rushed to my art studio, set up a large canvas on my easel, and began to paint the series that will be exhibited at Salon @ The Granada.

Black Holes remain a mystery, yet they invite us to glimpse the unexpected luminosities of reality. Virtual particles move in and out of existence all the time, just as we do. You see, empty space is never truly vacant, nor can our lives ever truly be blank, or meaningless. We can all choose to remake ourselves in each moment.

Bonus Question:

As I am the Fashionado, can you give us a little snippet of what you might wear at the event in Los Angeles?

As far as fashion is concerned, I am an artist and I like to wear clothes that I get paint on without getting upset. When inspiration comes, I am always ready to whip out a paintbrush. On the day of the opening, I do have a blue dress that matches Blue Star Implosion. If it gets a little paint on it, then it will be even more unique. I could even add it to an exhibit later. After all, it is my first art show in two years, and I’m ready to come out with a Big Bang! However, my second choice, in order to relate to the cosmic awareness of a dramatic and shining universe, would be a short V neck wraparound black dress with silver threads running through it. Both dresses are from a small fashion boutique, Altar’d State, in Charlottesville, Virginia. The staff was attentive and supportive in helping me find a style and size that suits me and my upcoming art exhibit at Salon @ the Granada in Los Angeles. The only way to discover what I will have on will be to attend the exhibit!

FASHIONADO