126
[Out of Hand]

Out of Hand

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Sheridan Crafts and Design catalogue 2010

Citation preview

Page 1: Out of Hand

[Out of Hand]

Page 2: Out of Hand

Page 3: Out of Hand

Out of Hand

There are many ways to interpret the phrase “out of hand”. It can

suggest a state of being outside the limit of control of processes

and materials; it can reference the manner in which ideas are

rendered into tangible objects; and finally, it hints at the

pursuit of an ideal, which ultimately remains unattainable.

We will never have in our hands the perfect piece because this

would imply a complete satisfaction with the result of our efforts.

We grow and develop through our making, and so too do our goals,

putting them forever just ahead of our grasp. This is a life of making:

constantly learning and evolving in an attempt to get ever closer to

perfection. This is our satisfaction; to thrive in the liminal space

between our outstretched hands and the unattainable object.

Page 4: Out of Hand

� graduates

Crafts & Design Graduates 2010

Ceramics

Julian Cutajar

Lana Filippone

Anita Hausmanis

Jenny Kyle

Mary McKenzie

Sara Nourshoae

Sean Robinson

Marcelina Salazar

Charlene Stallard

Allison Summers

Kass Swankey

Furniture

Heather Ahn

Patrick Covell

Boran Eom

Itzhak Even

Jared Hicks

Amy Keeler

Simon Kitz

James McDonald

Dylan McKinnon

Jordan Murphy

Mark Tan

Jean Willoughby

Page 5: Out of Hand

Textiles

Debbie Arruda

Anu Batra

Alex Bojanowski

Alexadria Goldman

Rebecca Horwitz

Anna Lehman

Meghan Macdonald

Alana McLeod

Eliza Plumley

Jamie Quinn

Simone Rauscher

Alison Syer

Glass

Greg Abra

Jesse Bromm

Tommy James Cudmore

Carolyn Eves

Ainsley Francis

Michael Gray

Rebecca Itzkow-Pollard

Toni Johnson

Jeff MacIntosh

Robyn McKay

Amanda Parker

William Ruppel

Christina Lee Tatarnic

David Thompson

Jessie Trott

Jen Van Herten

Page 6: Out of Hand

Foreword

� foreword

Out of hand, and over the top.

After looking at their work, it is possible to wonder whether any of this year’s graduates of the Sheridan Crafts and Design Program share any common vision of life, art, or the nature of human existence. Collectively, they have produced a riotous assembly of contradictory forms, colours, materials and approaches that manages to seduce, challenge, subvert and tri-umph over virtually any assumption you might secretly hold about beauty, materiality or what it means to work in craft.

The work is often masterful, yet sometimes rather slapstick. It is bold, or alternately subtle. It may be organic, or mechanical. It is both sensual and intellectual at the same time; and bright and dark. It is sometimes whole-heartedly pure, but elsewhere ambigu-ously layered, fractured, and assembled. It is smooth, shining, pleasurable. It is rough, decayed and sad.

Heidi Overhill is a full-time Professor in the Sheridan School of Animation, Arts and Design. A past president of ACIDO (The Association of Chartered Industrial Designers of Ontario) she recently completed an MFA at the University of Waterloo for a project applying museum collection protocols to the problems of domestic living.

Page 7: Out of Hand

Out of hand, and into the mind.

Author Jay Baldwin once said that a tool is something you use to add so much energy to an idea that other people can see it too. The objects in this catalogue are material manifes-tations of ideas. What they offer are thoughts made visible; concepts put into concrete, embodied form.

Some of the ideas are small and delicate. They are whispered musings on subtleties of form or function, or a self-referential probing into preconceptions about material and technique. But there are also big bumptious ideas that break loose to challenge larger issues; to glory in the sheer wanton variety of our fin de siècle Post Modern culture-at-large. These are ideas that speak of (and to) the head, the heart, the gut, and the hands. They reclaim the past; they predict the future. To look at them is to be astonished, transported, bemused.

Out of hand, and before the world.

The work in this catalogue has taken three years to complete. It has emerged out a whirlwind of educational commitment and concentration that was just the start of the process of lifelong learning required to perfect the skills and knowledge of crafts-manship. It is also the result of slowness. Education is a time of quiet and reflection; a private space away from the pressures of world, where it is possible to follow a fragile train of thought to some unexpected personal destination.

That private process is done. The work, and the graduates who made it, now stand revealed. The work is parted from its makers, and now speaks only for itself. It stands still, fixed here in this catalogue as a memento of the act of its creation. Its makers, the former students, are now our peers. They step forward, past this work, into the future.

Page 8: Out of Hand

Faculty

Administration Michael CollinsDeanHeather WhittonAssociate DeanNancy HeathProgram Officer

Ceramics StudioBruce Cochrane, BFA, MFAStudio HeadHugh Douglas-Murray, DiplTechnologist

Furniture Studio Peter Fleming, DiplStudio HeadRob Diemert, Cert, DiplTechnologist

Glass StudioKoen Vanderstukken,BFA,MFAStudio HeadJason Cornish, DiplTechnologist

Textiles Studio Rachel MacHenry, MAStudio HeadThea Haines, Dipl.,BATechnologist

InstructorsGeneralSusan Blersh, AOCAWinn Burke, BFA, MA(also Ceramics)Arounna Khounnoraj, BFA, MFAKathy Kranias, BFA, BedTony Makepeace, BA, MedHeidi Overhill, BID, CertClare Scott-Taggart Dipl, BAStephen Hugo-Seinader, Dipl, BAIsabel Stukator, AOCA (also Textiles)Gordon Thompson, BA, MA (also Ceramics)

CeramicsTony Clennell, BFA, MFADale Pereira, Dipl, BFA, MFA

FurnitureConnie Chisholm, BA, DiplRob Diemert, Cert, DiplScott Eckert, DiplIan Stewart, RSG, MES, BAAKirsten White, AOCA

GlassOrion Arger, DiplBlaise Campbell, DiplMaciej Dyszkiewicz, DiplAndrew Kuntz, DiplSally McCubbin, Advanced DiplBrad Sherwood, BAAmanda Skalski, DiplLucy Roussel, Dipl, BA

TextilesLissa Brunet, AOCAJanelle Guthrie, Dipl, BAPreethi Gopinath, NIDAnne Lemieux, DiplDorie Millerson, AOCAD, MFA

� faculty

Page 9: Out of Hand

Program

The Crafts and Design Program at Sheridan has been setting the standard for crafts education in Canada since being founded in 19�7. A close connection with the arts community, award-winning faculty, fully-equipped studios and a renowned curriculum all work to help students develop a critical sense of design and outstanding technical skills while at Sheridan.

The three-year Crafts and Design Program offers intensive, hands-on training in four studio areas: ceramics, furniture, glass and textiles. These are complemented with additional studios of design, drawing and photography.

The studio experience at Sheridan is supported by academic studies in craft history, commu-nications, supervised independent research, visits from established artists and exhibition opportunities for students.

In the third year of the program students address the important goal of self-employment as a craftsperson. Through lectures and coursework Sheridan students examine mar-ket dynamics in the crafts and design arena along with undertaking case studies of run-ning a professional craft or consulting design practice. At graduation, Sheridan students are among the most talented and best prepared emerging artists and designers in Canada.

Page 10: Out of Hand

Page 11: Out of Hand

[Ceramics]

Page 12: Out of Hand

10

Cloud tea Potporcelain

d. 15cm, h. �9cm

Goblet set porcelaind. 10cm, h. 1�.5

Julian Cutajar | [email protected]

10 ceramics

Page 13: Out of Hand
Page 14: Out of Hand

1�

Wine Cupsporcelain and black clay, silk-screened underglazes and lustresw. 1�cm, h. 9cm, l. 10cm

Lana Filippone | [email protected]

1� ceramics

Page 15: Out of Hand

Tea for Oneblack clay and porcelain, silk-screened underglazes and lustre

teapot: w. �1cm, h. �0cm, l. 1�cmteacup: w. 15cm, h. 10cm, l. 13cm

Page 16: Out of Hand

1�

Anita Hausmanis | [email protected]

Vase with Holesstonewarew. 7cm, h. �7.5cm, l. �0cm

Nesting Bowlsstonewareh. �0cm, d. �7.5 cm

Bowl Rim detail

1� ceramics

Page 17: Out of Hand

Little Devilstonewareh. �.5cm, d. 10cm

Page 18: Out of Hand

1�

Green Tea Potsoda/salt fired stoneware clayw. 17cm, h. �0.5cm, l. ��.5cm

Jenny Kyle | [email protected]

1� ceramics

Page 19: Out of Hand

Tea Pot soda/salt fired stoneware clay

w. 1�cm, h. 7.5cm

Page 20: Out of Hand

1�

Mary McKenzie | [email protected]

Aggressive Species ceramic low fired, soda fired brickw. 15.�cm, h. 19cm, l. 15.9cm

Aggressive Species (detail)low fired ceramic tile

w. �5.�cm, h. �5.�cm, l. 1�.�cm

1� ceramics

Page 21: Out of Hand
Page 22: Out of Hand

�0

Sara Nourshoae | [email protected]

�0 ceramics

Plateblack and white cone �d. �5cm

Page 23: Out of Hand

Trayblack and white cone �

w. ��cm, l. �0cm

Page 24: Out of Hand

��

Vase (detail)maiolica earthenwarew. ��cm, h. 5�cm

Vase (detail)earthenwarew. ��cm, h. 53cm

Vase (detail)maiolica earthenwarew. �0cm, h. ��cm

Pitcher maiolica earthenware

w. 30.5cm, h. 51cm, l. ��cm

Sean Robinson | [email protected]

�� ceramics

Page 25: Out of Hand
Page 26: Out of Hand

��

Marcelina Salazar | [email protected]

Sugar (detail)

�� ceramics

Page 27: Out of Hand

Cream and Sugarslat fired porcelain

w. �cm, h. 11.5cm, l. 10cm

Page 28: Out of Hand

��

Charlene Stallard | [email protected]

Faceted Mugstoneware cone � soda firedw. 1�cm, h. 9cm, l. 11cm

Faceted Jugstoneware cone � soda firedw. �1cm, h. �5cm, l. 17cm

�� ceramics

Page 29: Out of Hand

Canyon Vessel stoneware cone 10 salt fired

w. �9cm, h. �1cm, l. 35cm

Page 30: Out of Hand

��

Allison Summers | [email protected]

Bowlscone � oxidationd. �cm, h. 5.5cm

Shooterscone � oxidationd. �.5cm, h. 3.5cm

�� ceramics

Momentum Vasecone � oxidation

d. 7.5cm, h. �3cm

Page 31: Out of Hand
Page 32: Out of Hand

30

Wine Set of Contentmentwood fired porcelainJug: w. ��cm, h. �0cm, l. �0cmGoblets: w. 11cm, h. 1�cm

Kass Swankey | [email protected]

30 ceramics

Page 33: Out of Hand

Teapot of Whimsical Awakeningwood fired porcelain

with cane handle w. 30 cm, h. ��, l. 1�cm

Page 34: Out of Hand

3�

Page 35: Out of Hand

[Furniture]

Page 36: Out of Hand

3� 3� furniture

coffee tableash w. �5cm, h. ��cm, l. 50cm

Heather Ahn | heather�3��@hotmail.com

bar stoolash

w. 3�cm, h. 79cm, l. �0cm

Page 37: Out of Hand
Page 38: Out of Hand

3�

Easy Lounge Chairwalnut w. �1.5cm, h. 75.5cm, l. �0cm

Patrick Covell | [email protected]

3� furniture

Page 39: Out of Hand
Page 40: Out of Hand

3�

Boran Eom | [email protected]

Cabinetwalnut, woven fabric

w. �1cm, h. 101cm, l. 30cm

Dining Chairveneered walnut, maplew. �3cm, h. ��cm, l. �1cm

Kid’s Chairpoplarw. �1cm, h. �7cm, l. �1cm

3� furniture

Page 41: Out of Hand
Page 42: Out of Hand

�0

Love Chairash, upholstery w. �0cm, h. 3�cm, d. ��cm

�0 furniture

Itzhak Even יצחק אבן | [email protected]

Page 43: Out of Hand
Page 44: Out of Hand

��

Jared Hicks | [email protected]

Media Cabinetsolid European beech, MDF and veneered particle boardw. 1�0cm, h. �0cm, l. 35cm

�� furniture

Page 45: Out of Hand

Bar Stoolssolid European beech

w. �5cm, h. 91cm, l. ��cm

Page 46: Out of Hand

��

Amy Keeler | [email protected]

Dining TableWhite oak and powder coated steelw. �9cm, h. 7�cm, l. 15�cm

Hall CabinetWalnut, powder coated steelw. 33cm, h. ��cm, l. 101cm

�� furniture

Page 47: Out of Hand
Page 48: Out of Hand

��

Simon Kitz | [email protected]

Faces “Too Close For Comfort”plaster, zinc, ceramic, glassh. �1cm, l. 1��cm

�� furniture

Page 49: Out of Hand

Double Eggshell Basketfull round #� reed andflat weaversw. 51cm, h. �0cm

Page 50: Out of Hand

��

James McDonald | www.saplingcreations.com

Eastern Cherrycherryw. �1cm, h. ��cm, l. 1��cm

�� furniture

Page 51: Out of Hand

Waves of Jatobajatoba

w. 35cm, h. 7� cm, l. 150cm

Page 52: Out of Hand

50

Dylan McKinnon | [email protected]

Clear Sideboardeastern white pinew. 150cm, h. 7�cm, l. ��cm

Standard Chair hard maple

w. 50cm, h. 75cm, l. 50cm

50 furniture

Page 53: Out of Hand
Page 54: Out of Hand

5�

Stoolspoplar, lacquer, permanent marker

w. �0cm, h. 97cm, l. ��cm

Jordan Murphy | [email protected]

5� furniture

Paper-Mâché Waste BinsIkea catalogue paperw. ��cm, h. 33cm, l. ��cm

Page 55: Out of Hand
Page 56: Out of Hand

5�

Mark Tan | marktan��@gmail.com

Bar Stoolmahoganyw. �0cm, h. �1cm, l. 35cm

5� furniture

Page 57: Out of Hand

Cabinetwalnut, maple, MDF, lacquersw. �5cm, h. 3�cm, l. 10�cm

Page 58: Out of Hand

5�

Jean Willoughby | www.jeanwilloughby.com

Stacking Chairssand casted aluminum,walnut, white ashw. �5cm, h. 5�cm, l. �5cm

5� furniture

Page 59: Out of Hand
Page 60: Out of Hand

5�

Page 61: Out of Hand

[Glass]

Page 62: Out of Hand

�0

Greg Abra | [email protected]

Oh Well (detail)sand-cast & blown glassh. 30.5cm, d. �5cm

Crystal Fissure (detail)sand-cast glassh. ��cm, w. 33cm, d. �cm

�0 glass

Page 63: Out of Hand

Iced Jadeblown glass, waterh. �5cm, w. 15cm

Page 64: Out of Hand

��

Jesse Bromm | [email protected]

Hold Me Tight (detail)kiln formed glassand mixed mediaw. 13cm, h. �.5cm, l. 19.5cm

Knowledge Is Power (detail)kiln formed glass, found object, and mixed mediaw. 3�cm, h. �cm, l. 50cm

�� glass

Page 65: Out of Hand

Human Seeds: Triggerkiln formed, sand cast,

and hot formed glassw. �0cm, h. 15cm, l. 11cm

Page 66: Out of Hand

��

Tommy James Cudmore | [email protected]

Loveguins �0cm tall ��cm wingspan

Bloomguins50cm tall

30cm wingspan

�� glass

Page 67: Out of Hand
Page 68: Out of Hand

��

Carolyn Eves | [email protected]

Leaf Vaseblown glassw. 10 cm, h. 30 cm

Metallic Shadowsblown glass and steel wirew. 9cm, h. �3 cm

�� glass

Page 69: Out of Hand

Marble Vasesblown glass

h. �� cm, w. �1 cm

Page 70: Out of Hand

��

Ainsley Francis | [email protected]

�� glass

Self-Portrait (details)kiln cast glassapprox. w. 10cm, h. 5cm, l. 10cm

Page 71: Out of Hand

Hearts and Mindskiln cast and drill

engraved glassw. 15cm h. �0cm l. �cm

Page 72: Out of Hand

70

Michael Gray | [email protected]

Pizza Monster sculpted glassw. �5cm, l. 30cm

70 glass

Page 73: Out of Hand

Chicken Monstersculpted glass

w. �5cm, h. ��cm

Page 74: Out of Hand

7�

Rebecca Itzkow-Pollard | [email protected]

Nesting Bowlsbeer bottle pate de verre

w. 10cm, h. �cm

Wire Bowlkiln cast glass and copper wirew. 13cm, h. �cm

Egg Shellsbeer bottle pate de verrew. 3cm, h. �cm

7� glass

Page 75: Out of Hand
Page 76: Out of Hand

7�

Toni Johnson | [email protected]

Paradisesand casted/blownw. �0cm, h. �5cm

Discoveredsand casted/blownw. 30cm, h. 50cm

Crystal Study IVsand casted

w. 30cm, h. 15cm

7� glass

Page 77: Out of Hand
Page 78: Out of Hand

7�

Dead Apparitionglass and sandhot-sculpted assemblagew. 1�cm, h. ��cm, d. 35cm

Cage Organ #�flass and aluminum oxide gritblown and hot-sculpted assemblage with stone-wheel engraved componentsw. 1�3cm, h. 1�cm, d. ��cm

7� glass

Jeff MacIntosh | jmglass3�@gmail.com

Page 79: Out of Hand

Sand Apparitionglass and sand hot-sculpted, assemblagew. 3�cm, h. �3cm, d. �7cm

Clear Apparitionhot-sculpted glass, stone-wheel engraved, fire-polished and assembled hotw. 3�cm, h. 31cm, d. 31cm

Page 80: Out of Hand

7�

Form Variation 1blown glassw. �cm, h. �cm

Form Variation 1blown glassw. �cm, h. �cm

Form Variation 1blown glassw. �cm, h. �cm

Robyn McKay | [email protected]

7� glass

Page 81: Out of Hand

Abstract Formblown glass

w. �cm, h. 1�cm

Page 82: Out of Hand

�0

Amanda Parker | [email protected]

Colonypate de verrevarious sizes

Collected Marksengraved crystal, wood boxw. 10cm, h. 15cm, l. 31cm

�0 glass

Page 83: Out of Hand
Page 84: Out of Hand

��

William Ruppel | [email protected]

Family Crestglassw. 15cm, h. 15.5cm, l. 1�cm

�� glass

Page 85: Out of Hand

Red Moon Vessel glass

w. 1�.5cm, h. 3�cm

Page 86: Out of Hand

��

Christina Lee Tatarnic | [email protected]

Fobletsblown glass, felted woolw. 10cm, h. 10.5cm, l. 5cm

Winter Seedshot sculpted and cold worked

glass, crocheted and felted woolw. ��cm, h. �.5cm, l. 1�cm

Foblets (detail)

�� glass

Page 87: Out of Hand
Page 88: Out of Hand

��

David Thompson | [email protected]

Fossilized (detail)coldworked and sandcast glassh. 3�cm, w. 33cm

Forgotten (detail)coldworked and sandcast glassh. 17cm, w. �5cm

A Tank Built With Love(detail)

�� glass

Page 89: Out of Hand

A Tank Built With Lovehot sculpted glassh. ��cm, w. 1�cm, d. 1�cm

Page 90: Out of Hand

��

Jessie Trott | [email protected]

Stacks (detail)kiln cast glassw. 10cm, h. 1�cm, l. ��cm

�� glass

Page 91: Out of Hand

Stacks with Woodkiln cast glass and found wood

w. 11cm, h. 1� m, l. 31cm

Page 92: Out of Hand

90

Eating Home �pâte de verre glassw. 15cm, h. ��cm

Jen Van Herten | [email protected]

90 glass

Page 93: Out of Hand

Eating Homepâte de verre glass

w. 15cm, h. ��cm (each)

Page 94: Out of Hand

9�

Page 95: Out of Hand

[Textiles]

Page 96: Out of Hand

Debbie Arruda | [email protected]

Purse (interior)machine and hand stitched

rememberhandmade, hand stitched, letterpress paperw. ��cm, h. 1�cm

9� textiles

Page 97: Out of Hand

Purseshand beaded and embroidered

cotton and bamboo

Page 98: Out of Hand

Anu Batra | [email protected]

Chapter �, Page 1 (An Autobiography)mylar, embroidery punch cards, foot prints, screen and block printing, hand embroidery

w. 1�5cm, h. 150cm

9� textiles

Page 99: Out of Hand
Page 100: Out of Hand

9�

Alex Bojanowski | [email protected]

Wer Bin Ich? Series > Hair Broochhuman hair, embroidery, beading, silkw. 1�cm, h. �1cm

War Widow Series > Newsembroidery, cellulose fibers and natural dyew. 10cm, h. 10cm

9� textiles

Page 101: Out of Hand

War Widow Series > Brooch Badgeembroidery in salvaged frame

cellulose fibers and natural dyew. 1�cm, h. �1cm

Page 102: Out of Hand

Alexandria Goldman | [email protected]

Felt Collarhand felted merino and silk blend, satin ribbon

w. 1�cm, l. ��cm

Alice Hatfelt, dupioni silk, crinolinew. 15cm, h. 19cm, l. �1 cm

Alice Hat (detail) Felt Collar (detail)hand felted merino, satin lining, machine embroidery

100 textiles

Page 103: Out of Hand

Felt Collarhand felted merino and silk blend, satin ribbon

w. 1�cm, l. ��cm

Page 104: Out of Hand

Hourani Braceletswool, raffia, cotton thread,glass beads

Rebecca Horwitz | [email protected]

10� textiles

Page 105: Out of Hand
Page 106: Out of Hand

Anna Lehman | [email protected]

Refashioned Dress (detail)leather, zippers, beads

Refashioned Dressvintage materials, zippers,

beads, photo transfersw. ��cm, h. 90cm

10� textiles

Page 107: Out of Hand
Page 108: Out of Hand

106 106 textiles

Seahorsecrocheted cotton stringh. 7cm, w. 2cm, l. 4.5cm

Brass Ringscrocheted brass wire, stones, beadsh. 3cm, w. 3cm, l. 3cm

Meghan Macdonald | www.meghan-macdonald.com

Page 109: Out of Hand

Kitchen Chairfree-motion embroidery

on silkscreen meshh. �cm, w. 3cm, l. 3cm

Page 110: Out of Hand

Alana McLeod | [email protected]

heritage flagleather, pine cone, driftwood, wool and stitchw. ��cm, h. ��cm

dress flagleather, wool, stitch anddriftwoodw. �cm, h. 1�cm

10� textiles

Page 111: Out of Hand

home flagwool, silk, denim,

driftwood, stitch and leatherw. 1�cm, h. ��cm

Page 112: Out of Hand

110

Eliza Plumley | [email protected]

Inside-out Bag (detail)crocheted wire and fabric,

woven various materialsw. �0cm, h. �0 cm

Pillow (detail)silkscreen print, hand-painted and machine stitchedw. 17cm, h. 50 cm

110 textiles

Page 113: Out of Hand
Page 114: Out of Hand

Jamie Quinn | [email protected]

Crust (detail)beading, distressing

No. �embroidery, distressingw. �3cm, h. 75cm

Tattooed Ladyembroidery, distressing, vintage buttonsw. 7�cm, h. �0cm

11� textiles

Page 115: Out of Hand
Page 116: Out of Hand

11�

Simone Rauscher | [email protected]

“Mousemeat”unbleached cotton, poly thread, grease and pigment stainsw. ��cm, h. 91.5cm

Teethunbleached cotton, satin,

poly threadw. 150cm, h. 300cm

11� textiles

Page 117: Out of Hand
Page 118: Out of Hand

Hand & Lock Embroidery (detail)wool felt, beading, hand embroideryw. 9cm, h. 1�cm

Surface Design (detail)acrylic on paperw. �3cm, h. 30.5cm

Surface Design (detail)acrylic on paperw. �3cm, h. 30.5cm

Alison Syer | [email protected]

11� textiles

Page 119: Out of Hand

Hand & Lock Embroidery (detail)wool felt, beading, hand embroidery

w. 1�.5cm, h. 1�cm

Page 120: Out of Hand

AcknowledgementsThe graduating class of 2010 would like to thank several people for their assistance in making this exhibition and catalogue a reality: We are profoundly grateful to Isabel Stukator for all that she has done. Her guidance, hard work and patience can be found on every page of this catalogue; to Heidi Overhill for generously accepting the task of writing the foreword to the catalogue; to Arounna Khounnoraj for all of her help with the exhibition. To administrators Nancy Heath, Mary Cator, and Heather Whitton our associate dean; we thank you for all of your behind-the-scenes assistance and dedication. We thank Jennifer Deighton for her assistance with fundraising and sponsorships. Jamie Owen and Owen Colbourne; thank you not only for your expertise and assistance in the gallery and photo studio, but for being delightful and fascinating hallway conversationalists. To Mike Young; for working with Isabel on the design and layout of this catalogue. Also, we thank our peers and colleagues for all of their hard work on the various catalogue and exhibition committees. And lastly, we offer a special thanks to the

118 acknowledgements

support staff of the Crafts and Design program at Sheridan whose daily efforts help to make the school a pleasant and uplifting place to work and study.

Page 121: Out of Hand

Furniture

Looking back on the point of arrival three years ago, a diverse group of personalities has emerged. We have only now begun to understand our place and identities within craft. It is with great appreciation to those who have guided us towards a successful end, both in and outside of the studio, that we take these next steps out into the world. Thank you for all your moral support, advice and motivation along the way.

We would like to personally thank the studio faculty: Rob Diemert, Peter Fleming, Connie Chisholm, Ian Stewart, Scott Eckert, and Kirsten White, as well as those who have sup-ported and inspired us outside of the studio: Stephen Hugo-Seinader, Arounna Khounnoraj, Isabel Stukator, Claire Scott-Taggert and Kathy Kranias.

Finally, we would also like extend a special thanks to our family and friends for their love and support during out time here at Sheridan.

Ceramics

The Class of �010 would like to extend a message of gratitude to all our mentors.

To Bruce Cochrane for his quietude in dealing with our frustrations in our formative years and his equally quiet excitement in our successes. Your understanding of how mud can become a beautiful thing will always be an inspiration.

To Hugh Douglas-Murray, who with patience and patience and patience, put up with our messes and misunderstandings of how things actually work in a studio. You provided us with support that we did not even know we needed.

To Winn Burke, Tony Clennell, Cathleen Nich-olson, Dale Pereira, Gord Thompson and the many visiting artists, who found time to share their knowledge and their passion for clay and the ways in which it works (and doesn’t). There is no measurable extent to our gratitude.

We have all been gifted with an artistic bent, but it could never have come this far, this fruitful or this fulfilling without your dedica-tion to us – the Class of �010.

Page 122: Out of Hand

Textiles

The ladies of the �010 graduating class of the Textiles studio would like to thank firstly and foremostly Rachel MacHenry for being not only a constant source of inspiration; but support, guidance, and love.

Thanks to all the textile teachers who have helped us on our way: Thea Haines, Isabel Stukator, Preethi Gopinath, Lissa Brunet, Janelle Guthrie, Dorie Millerson, Anna Zygowski and Arounna Khounnoraj. A special thank-you to those that have helped us from behind the scenes, like Jamie Owen, Heather Whitton, and Nancy Heath.

This year has been full of amazing opportunities, and we would also like to mention G&S Dye, Rowenta Irons, Bernina, The Knit Café, Telio Cie and Vanja Vasic of Toronto Alternative Fashion Week for their support in our academic excellence.

Glass

As the Glass department approaches graduation, we can not help but look back on the previous three years and smile. Who knew that seventeen of us would make this journey together, and explore the glass medium in every possible direction imagined, spending unbelievable amount of days and nights together, and grow into the artists we worked so hard to become.

The Sheridan experience would not have been the same without our studio technician Jason Cornish. His advice, encouragements and sense humour are much appreciated. Our teachers, Koen Vanderstukken, Brad Sherwood, Blaise Campbell, Andy Kuntz, Maciej Dyskiewicz, Orion Arger, Lucy Roussel, and Sally McCubbin’s expertise, patience, and support helped us into our own. Teaching us to push the limits, ask questions, and to “just do it”.

And lastly, a special thank you for an unforgettable first year with our teacher assistants Clayton Haigh and Rachael Shepherd; don’t stop believing!

1�0 acknowledgements

Page 123: Out of Hand

SponsorsThe students would also like to extend a special thank you to all of our sponsors who made this catalogue and the graduate exhibitions possible.

A & M Wood Specialty

Robert and Ina Abra

Elizabeth Barnes

Anu Raina Designs Inc.

Graham Muir Sales

Playing With Fire

Rick Reinhard

Christopher Rowe

Maxwell Thompson

Page 124: Out of Hand

1��

Sheridan Institute of Technology and Advanced LearningSchool of Animation, Arts and DesignCrafts and Design Program1�30 Trafalgar RoadOakville, OntarioCanadaL�H �L1www.sheridancraftsanddesign.com905.��5.9�30

For more information on Crafts and Design and the other �5 full-time programs within the School of Animation, Arts and Design, visit our website at www.sheridaninstitute.ca.

Contact

Page 125: Out of Hand
Page 126: Out of Hand

Sheridan Institute of Technology and Advanced LearningSchool of Animation, Arts and DesignCrafts and Design ProgramOakville, Ontario