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Raku Workshop – 2 Day Make Glaze & Fire: July 2023

 

Join us in another of our two day raku workshop that uses a variety of hand building techniques to take you from raw clay to finished, fired, glazed work ready for you to take home. This fun and relaxed workshop, led by local ceramicists Richard Jeffery and Jayne Cunliffe, is suitable for absolute beginners, or for those with some ceramics experience who want to see the raku process through from start to finish. The workshop will have a maximum of six students and is run in Jayne’s pottery studio.

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Day One 9th July – Make a number of pieces using basic hand building techniques: slab building (making work from rolled out flat slabs of clay), pinch pots and coiling.  These are two of the earliest ceramic techniques,  allowing you to build up simple or complex shapes by forming clay with your hands and then adding thin ‘sausages’ of clay to expand the form.

Raku Workshop – 2 Day Make Glaze & Fire: July 2023

Day Two 23rd July – Help prepare a variety of glazes to decorate your work in whichever way you choose, with support and suggestions from your tutors if needed, and help fire the work outdoors in the raku kiln. The raku firing is the culmination of this workshop – helping load the kiln and manage the firing, smoking and washing your beautiful pots ready to take home…

Cost – The two day workshop costs £95 (including clay, glazes, bisque and raku firing) per person. We’ve been able to keep costs the same as 2022.

Date

9th July 2023
Expired!

Time

10:00 am - 4:00 pm

Location

Sandy Hill Arts
Sandy Hill Lane, Corfe Castle, Dorset BH20 5JF
Website
https://sandyhillarts.co.uk/

Tutors

  • Richard Jeffery
    Richard Jeffery
    CERAMICS | PHOTOGRAPHY

    Richard Jeffery is a Dorset photographer and ceramicist.

    “Photography is often about surface and texture, the passage of time and water across the seen environment; about landscape and unseen human interaction, the small detail of landscape often overlooked. Images from rather than of the landscape, often analogue, shot on medium or large format cameras.”

    Richard’s ceramic work is hand built using stoneware and sometimes porcelain clays, usually raku or smoke fired. His recent work explores early memories of children’s tin toys from the 1950s and 60s.

    Richard has taught both subjects in Further Education for twenty years, and is keen for students to learn through exploration as much as possible. He is a trustee of Sandy hill Arts.

  • Jayne Cunliffe
    Jayne Cunliffe
    CERAMICS

    CERAMICS

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