In Residence: 15th Edition

On View
August 27, 2022 –
October 29, 2022
Location
Asher Gallery

Tour of “In Residence: 15th Edition”
Saturday, August 27, 3:00 – 3:30 PM

In Residence: 15th Edition celebrates the Artist Residency Program, which has supported artists working in the field of craft for more than two decades. The show features work in clay, metal, and fiber by 2021-2022 resident artists, Joan Clare Brown, Kelly Dzioba, Priscilla Dobler Dzul, Jihye Han, Chenlu Hou, Carl Johnson, Naomi Peterson, Kerianne Quick, Nash Quinn, and Stephanie J. Woods.

The Artist Residency Program at HCCC gives resident artists a space for creative exploration, exchange, and collaboration with other artists, arts professionals, and the public. HCCC Curatorial Fellow Cydney Elaine Pickens notes, “What separates In Residence: 15th Edition from its predecessors is the collaboration among residents. While some of these artists had the opportunity to create collaboratively in person, others were in conversation about how their practices may align or differ, and each was uniquely impacted by their residency here in Houston.”

In Residence: 15th Edition was curated by HCCC Curatorial Fellow, Cydney Elaine Pickens.


Image credits:

  1. Chenlu Hou, “Props-I,” 2022. Clay, zip-ties, light blobs. Photo by the artist.
  2. Joan Brown and Nash Quinn collaboration “Untitled,” 2022.
  3. Stephanie J. Woods, “Shake EM,” 2022. Afro hair, yarn, beads, and hand-dyed fabric. Photo courtesy of the artist.
  4. Kerianne Quick, “Linked,” 2022. Brass, gold plate, rubber. Photo by the artist.
  5. Carl Johnson, “33’ Waffle.” Cotton and steel wire. Photo by the artist.
  6. Kelly Dzioba, “Untitled (Color Shift Felt Weave)” 2021. Party beads and plywood. 16 inches x 16 inches. Photo courtesy of the artist.
  7. Jihye Han, “How to be an adult,” 2022. White Stoneware with white slip, underglaze, glaze, Cone 6 oxidation fired. 15.5 x 12 x 14.5 inches. Photo courtesy of the artist.
  8. Nash Quinn, “Space City Stash Box,” 2022. Enameled copper and sterling silver. Photo by the artist.
  9. Joan Clare Brown, “Untitled,” 2022. Porcelain, mason stain. 6 x 6 x 5 inches. Photo by the artist.
  10. Chenlu Hou, “Props-I,” 2022. Clay, zip-ties, light blobs. Photo by the artist.
  11. Naomi Peterson, “Soft Goblet,” 2022. Red stoneware, cone 5 oxidation. Photo by the artist.
  12. Kerianne Quick, “Baddy Two Shoes,” 2022. Leather, brass, gold plate. Photo by the artist.
  13. Stephanie J. Woods, “the wait of it,” 2020. Nine years of detangled afro hair formed into a loosely woven vessel, red clay, and umbrella tree. Photo courtesy of the artist.
  14. Jihye Han, “SheepSleep,” 2022. White Stoneware with white slip, underglaze, glaze, Cone 6 oxidation fired. 10 x 7.5 x 11 inches.  Photo courtesy of the artist.
  15. Joan Clare Brown, “Untitled,” 2022. Porcelain, mason stain, glaze, luster. 7 x 8 x 4.5 inches. Photo by the artist.
  16. Kelly Dzioba, “Untitled (Color Shift Felt Weave)” 2021. Party beads and plywood. 16 inches x 16 inches. Photo courtesy of the artist.
  17. Carl Johnson, “9’ Undulating.” Cotton and steel wire. Photo by the artist.
  18. Naomi Peterson, “More more more,” 2022. Red stoneware, cone 5 oxidation. Photo by the artist.

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft galleries are dedicated to interpreting and exhibiting craft in all media and making practices. Artists on view can range from locally emerging to internationally renowned and our curatorial work surveys traditional and experimental approaches to materials.

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft galleries are dedicated to interpreting and exhibiting craft in all media and making practices. Artists on view can range from locally emerging to internationally renowned and our curatorial work surveys traditional and experimental approaches to materials.

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