Virtual Artist Talk with Maya Wilson-Sanchez
The Gardiner Museum brings together people of all ages and backgrounds through the shared values of creativity, wonder, and community that clay and ceramic traditions inspire.
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Virtual Artist Talk with Maya Wilson-Sanchez
June 14, 2022 @ 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
This program is presented as part of the International Ceramic Art Fair (ICAF).
Join Gardiner Museum Curatorial Resident Maya Wilson-Sanchez for a free virtual conversation about the work of Kukuli Velarde, a Peruvian-American artist who specializes in painting and ceramic sculptures made out of clay and terracotta. Velarde’s work is featured in the International Ceramic Art Fair (ICAF).
ABOUT MAYA WILSON-SANCHEZ
Maya Wilson-Sanchez is an independent curator, writer, and editor based in Toronto. She is interested in processes of history-making and building connections between local and international communities to foster networks of exchange and solidarity. Her essays, reviews, and exhibition texts can be found in various publications including The Senses and Society Journal, Canadian Art, Contemporary HUM, and the book Other Places: Reflections on Media Arts in Canada (PUBLIC Books, 2019).
ABOUT THE INTERNATIONAL CERAMIC ART FAIR
The International Ceramic Art Fair (ICAF) makes its highly anticipated return to the Gardiner Museum, featuring works by emerging and established ceramic artists from a wide range of backgrounds, and an exciting slate of online and in-person programming.
ICAF 2022 celebrates connections between body, identity, and land. Global mythologies have long connected the human body to the earth, from a Nubian deity fashioning humans from clay to scientific explorations of clay as the first carrier of life. The human body is symbolically if not literally connected to clay, helping us understand who we are as individuals, a society, and a species.
As we navigate global health and environmental crises, understanding our bodily connection to the earth becomes increasingly urgent. Likewise, the experiences of being, or being in, a particular body defines many aspects of our lives, from health and ability, to experiences of discrimination and trauma. Our bodies help construct our identities, mediating, filtering, and generating our experiences.
Figurative ceramic sculpture is one of the most dynamic areas of practice today. Artists from across the spectrum are exploring new approaches, representations, and voices to help us see ourselves in ways that generate compassion, empathy, truth telling, and beauty.
This year’s Honorary Patron is internationally renowned Kenyan-born British studio potter, Magdalene Odundo.
Presenting Sponsor
Lead Sponsor
Supporting Sponsors
David Binet
Margaret McCain
Contributing Sponsors
Tamara Rebanks & James Appleyard
Hotel Partner