Garden Art Sculptures and Poles
Adult Course | Available
Create a striking garden sculpture using wheel throwing and/or hand-building techniques. You’ll have the freedom to design, craft, and glaze unique pieces that reflect your personal style. Think hollow "beads" that stack on a steel rod. The class will explore topics such as form, composition, construction methods, decoration techniques, and considerations for assembly. Additionally, you’ll make a sturdy concrete base to support your totem. This workshop is for intermediate and advanced students with skills in construction techniques and experience glazing.
- Intermediate/Advanced skills with clay and glaze required.
- Community tools are available for student use, in exception of a small sponge. If you prefer personal tools, a basic ceramics tool kit, small sponges and large clean up sponges may be available for purchase at ASLD on a first come, first served basis. We welcome you to bring any new, used, found and repurposed tools you may have.
- Please bring to class:
- -Your favorite tools
- -Clean up sponge
- Optional
- -Apron
- -Towel
- -Dishwashing gloves to use for end of class clean up
- If you purchase your own tools, we suggest you assemble a basic tool kit that includes:
- - Potter's rib (wood and or rubber)
- - Metal rib
- - Wood modeling tool
- - Needle tool
- - Trimming tool(s)
- - Throwing sponge
- Local Ceramic supply stores:
- Rocky Mountain Clay 1220 W 1st Ave, Denver, CO 80223
- Continental Clay 5303 East 47th Ave., Denver, CO 80216
- Stoneleaf Pottery 6611 W 58th Pl, Arvada, CO 80003
- Meiningers 499 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203
Rita Vali
I am fortunate to be working with clay, which is so wonderfully tactile and responsive; an alluring medium with enduring results. As a maker of pottery, I hope my pieces participate in the rituals of daily life - sustenance, celebration, contentment, ornament and discovery. Lofty goals for a humble pot!
In our hurried world, using hand-made objects can give us a moment to observe, slow down and feel satisfied. I create pottery that combines clean modern form with bold graphic patterns inspired from the richness and diversity of everywhere – landscape, textiles, geometry, botany, the microscopic world.
Driven by observation and a need to make objects by hand, I draw upon my background in biology and apply it to my art practice. I approach clay in a methodical manner, combining wheel-thrown and altered pieces with slab elements. I embrace coaxing form and surface decoration to interplay in a symbiotic way. I also love color, and the challenge of using it in complementary ways. Creating work that successfully balances form, color, line and pattern is a goal and a thrill I never tire of. I am driven by a passion to create and to be part of an arts tradition.
My life with clay has been enhanced over the years through experiences as an instructor. I find making the world of clay accessible to others very rewarding, whether through individual projects, workshops, or school-wide collaborative installations. In both the studio and the classroom, working with clay is a very satisfying and challenging endeavor as I strive to make pottery that communicates my passion as a maker.