Saving Sharks with Art

Saving Sharks with Art | the dirt | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

Local Santa Cruz artist Kirk McNeill along with his team of designers and fabricators have created a forged metal sculpture of hammerhead sharks dubbed the Sharky-Go-Round to bring awareness to the cruel act of shark finning. 100 million sharks are killed each year for soup. Their fins are cut off and they are thrown back in the ocean to die slowly. Sharks are at the top of the food chain in virtually every part of every ocean. In that role, they keep populations of other fish healthy and in proper proportion for their ecosystem. Where sharks are eliminated, the marine ecosystem loses its balance. This sculpture hopes to raise awareness of this issue at Burning Man 2016, and places beyond! The concept includes ten sharks turning slowly and majestically above the playa, in stark contrast to a single shark, finless and dead on the base.

On a personal note, I have slowly seen the sculpture come to life right around the corner from my own new studio space and it is impressive! The skill in the fabrication of this piece is incredible, the sharks swimming against the blue sky is beautiful and the message behind the work is dear to my heart too. #missionblue

Support this project via the Indiegogo campaign HERE…

Save the Date: Reflections | Shadows

Save the Date: Reflections | Shadows | events | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

My Bone Series Wall Installation will be included in the upcoming Reflections | Shadows exhibit at the Healdsburg Center for the Arts in downtown Healdsburg California.

About the show:
The physical aesthetics and conceptual connotations evoked by reflective material or projected dark shapes of shadows may create intriguing design, trick the eye, or distort our view. The exhibit presents artists’ interpretations using these phenomena as design, metaphor, layers of reality, a state of mind or mythology to evoke images of truth and poetry.

Show Dates:
July 21 – August 28
Artist’s Reception July 23, 5 – 7pm
Artist’s Salon July 28, 5 – 7pm
Poetry Night August 17, 7pm
Closing Tea August 28th 2 – 4pm

130 Plaza St., Healdsburg, CA 95448

Featured Work: Specimen Series ON SALE!

The specimen series are small wall mounted sculptures inspired by biological specimen collections often seen in museums. They are abstracted version of seeds, fungi, shells and bones made entirely of clay and arranged in an intriguing compositions. Reminiscent of beautifully arranged sushi in bento boxes, these pieces are designed to intrigue. The ceramic boxes create frames which both restrict and enhance the pieces that they contain. The forms in each box have been fused into place through the kiln firing process.

Featured Work: Specimen Series | the dirt | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

Each box has a simple wire loop on the back and is ready to hang. These pieces are small enough to fit anywhere and bold enough to make a statement in your space. Originally prices are $225, these pieces are now available for $195 through the end of July, browse the available pieces from this series in the online shop.

New Studio Update

We have made such amazing progress on the new space, that we are ready to start moving in!

The new walls that are dividing the clay areas from the non-clay areas are up, they’ve been sheeted with plywood and the recycled doors are installed. Next up is painting those new walls and sheeting the ‘ceiling’ with a thin clear plastic which will keep the clay dust out but still keep us compliant with the fire code. Then we get to move everything in! Beyond setting things up and getting organized in the new space, we also need to get the kiln wired in properly, the new sandblaster set up and get water running to a sink, so there is a lot to be done. I keep reminding myself that my current studio evolved over years and that this new studio will evolve too, it doesn’t all have to happen at once.

New Studio Update | the dirt | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

There are still 3 more weeks of Summer Workshops and Adult Clay Classes at the Aptos Studio, but things have definitely started to change on this end too as I’ve slowly taken one truck load at a time over to the new space. I think the biggest visual change is the Vine Series sculptures that have been growing up the outside studio walls for 10 years have now been packed away. I think I patched up 1000 holes in the process. It’s amazing to go through 12 years of art, projects, supplies and decide what still has value and what can be recycled or repurposed, a necessary process to go through every once in awhile.New Studio Update | the dirt | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

Last Chance to See Clay & Glass

Last Chance to See Clay & Glass | the dirt | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

 

This is the final week to see the 5th Annual Clay & Glass exhibit at the Healdsburg Center for the Arts. The exhibit closes with a final afternoon tea on Sunday July 17th from 2 – 4 at the gallery.

I have two installations from my Bone Series included in this exhibition alongside 12 other talented artists all working in clay or glass. It is a beautiful exhibition, I hope to see you there!

Join me:
Healdsburg Center for the Arts
130 Plaza St., Healdsburg, CA
July 17th 2 – 4

Create with Clay Project Book 4 is out!

Create with Clay Project Book 4 is out! | the dirt | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

 

Teachers, start planning your fall clay projects now with these five fun classroom tested projects you can do with your kiddos! In collaboration with art teacher extraordinaire Kathy Barbro, my Create with Clay PDF Book 4 is now available for $5 in the Art Projects for Kids online shop.

PDF FILE INCLUDES INSTRUCTIONS FOR:
• Sunflower
• Bear
• House Numbers
• Burgers
• 3D Letters

DOWNLOAD NOW

 

 

Summer Workshops: Clay Containers

The talented students in my Summer Sculpting Workshops used this great lesson from Ceramic Arts Daily to create handbuilt hexagonal lidded containers. We used a paper template to cut out the main shapes and then attached the walls together and built the lid in the same way. They cut a half circle key to keep the lids from sliding off and then embellished the pieces with decorative cut outs and knobs. The challenge was to keep the walls straight and corners angled just right, I think they did a fantastic job with this project! Thanks to Ceramic Arts Daily and Don Hall for sharing this idea!

Summer Workshops: Clay Containers | the dirt | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

Clay in the Classroom: Staying Organized

When I was teaching at elementary schools, I was rarely given a classroom to work out of, which meant that I had to haul clay, tools, projects and examples classroom to classroom. Over the 10 years that I taught ‘art-on-a-cart’ style, I developed an organized system to make it work without making a million trips back and forth. Here are a few ways I was able to stay organized and mobile…

Clay in the Classroom: Staying Organized | the dirt | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

Cart:

Rather than use a cart, I preferred to use a hand truck to move all of my clay class supplies around campus. I also like to find old wooden wine crates to carry my supplies in and I attach drawer handles onto the short sides for easy lifting and carrying. I could put 25-30 plastic cutting boards (which are each students work area), a hard plastic tub with a lid filled with clay tools and examples of the project we’re working on for the day all into the wine crate. That box goes onto the hand truck first, then I would pile a 25lb bag of clay on top for each class I had that day and I’d carry cardboard boxes that I’d put all of the students projects in. For me, this became the easiest way for me to haul all that heavy stuff classroom to classroom. If I was teaching back to back classes, I would leave the box of finished projects in the classroom so I could move onto the next class. At the end of the day, I’d return to collect the work and move it to the kiln room to dry and fire. In the kiln room, these cardboard boxes could be stacked since they are designed to fit and lock together, which made it space efficient and easy to keep each classroom’s projects together.

Project Boxes:

Costco is a great place to collect boxes that are strong enough to carry clay projects and are stackable for easy storing. I like to find the cardboard boxes that were designed to carry something heavy like melons and it’s even better if they are waxed on the surface since the boxes will last longer holding wet clay.

Typically I could fit 25 – 30 small projects from each class in one box and the box would be labeled with the classroom number and/or the teacher’s name on it for easy sorting. When the pieces came out of the kiln, they could be sorted right back into the correct labeled box. This system made it a bit easier to sort 300+ projects back to the correct student.

Labeling Art:

Keeping track of every student’s piece of art is a tricky task especially when things are going from the classroom to the kiln and back again and when you have some pretty cryptic handwriting in clay. If the kids are old enough and able, I would have them write their names on the bottom of their project and also their classroom number.  If the kids were younger, I would have the kids bring me their finished project and I would write their name and room number on it for them and then place it in the cardboard box. I admit that over 10+ years, a few projects seemed to of disappeared into the abyss like a sock in the dryer but with this labeling and boxing system, the majority of projects found their way back and forth to the kiln and back to the correct creator.

Anyone else have other tips for a mobile clay classroom?

My Art, Your Space: Cruz Family

Here’s this week’s share from the Cruz Family:

“I am amazed by how each piece is intricately made.  And, these two pieces look like they were meant to be together.  One is growing and exploring out of its shell. The other one is still nesting and carefully watching.  

These two pieces are suspended by hidden wires placed high on my loft’s wall.  They cast different shadows depending on the time of day.  They are very cool and one of a kind, I love them.”
My Art, Your Space: Cruz Family | the dirt | Jenni Ward ceramic sculpture

I love seeing where my art ends up and hearing why you connect with a piece, if you have some of my work that you’d like to share, please email me! Thanks for sharing!