EXHIBITIONS & TOURS · exhibitions & tours delicate multiplex at the greater richmond convention...

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EXPLORE CLAY, MINDFULNESS AND MEMORY THROUGH EXHIBITIONS SURROUNDING NCECA’S 54 TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE EXHIBITIONS & TOURS DELICATE MULTIPLEX AT THE GREATER RICHMOND CONVENTION CENTER, ROOM E11A • BEAN FINNERAN

Transcript of EXHIBITIONS & TOURS · exhibitions & tours delicate multiplex at the greater richmond convention...

Page 1: EXHIBITIONS & TOURS · exhibitions & tours delicate multiplex at the greater richmond convention center, room e11a • bean finneran. the burdens of history 2020 nceca annual exhibition

EXPLORE CLAY, MINDFULNESS AND MEMORY THROUGH EXHIBITIONS SURROUNDING NCECA’S 54TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE

EXHIBITIONS & TOURS

DELICATE MULTIPLEX AT THE GREATER RICHMOND CONVENTION CENTER, ROOM E11A • BEAN FINNERAN

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THE BURDENS OF HISTORY 2020 NCECA ANNUAL EXHIBITION CURATED BY ANNA WALKER

MARCH 20–MAY 31 VISUAL ARTS CENTER OF RICHMONDReception: Thursday, March 26, 5–9 pm

MARCH 1–31 GLAVE KOCEN GALLERYReception: Thursday, March 26, 5–9 pm

Anna Walker’s exhibition title, The Burdens of History, invites us to ruminate on the many ways that time’s passage compels the imagination to creative practice. With evoca-tive organizing concepts, the exhibition’s call appealed to artists working with historical touchstones to reach inno-vative concepts and practices. Ceramic art is perhaps the most earthbound of all creative forms. The very ground beneath our feet holds raw material and a repository of shards embedded with signifiers, influences, and origins. In Richard Powers’ novel Generosity (2009), a creative non-fiction course is engaged in a classroom argument about whether there are a fixed number of stories in the world. The instructor reflects that he ought to advise his students that there are only two: “the future arrives to smack around the past, or the past reaches out to strangle the future.” Playful and pugilistic, this characterization of creative nonfiction applies well to the critical dialogs artists carry on with the past.

Anna Walker, our curator for the 2020 NCECA Annual has exposed rich veins of cultural deposits where newly evocative problems are discoverable. Anna’s curiosity, intelligence, and rigor bring us closer to the core paradox that undergirds artistic vision: our capacity to invent evolves out of remembering… with critical perspective, the past. Our gratitude for Anna’s work and vision also extends to the highly collaborative teams at our exhibition host venues, Visual Arts Center of Richmond and Glave Kocen Gallery. NCECA’s exhibitions program is dependent on the creative energies of makers that shape our field. We are indebted to all of the artists invited, juried, and those whose works were considered but not included in the exhibition. Projects Manager Kate Vorhaus and Communications Manager Candice Finn dedicated innumerable hours to making this exhibition and catalogue come to life. Our deepest appreciations go out for their efforts.

VISUAL ARTS CENTER OF RICHMOND1812 W Main Street Richmond, VA 804-353-0094 www.visarts.org

HOURS: Mon–Sun 9am–9pm

ARTISTS: Jennifer Ling Datchuk, Woody De Othello, Nicki Green, Raven Halfmoon, Issac Logsdon, and Elizabeth M. Webb

GLAVE KOCEN GALLERY1620 W Main Street Richmond, VA 804-358-1990 glavekocengallery.com

HOURS: Mon–Fri 11am–6pm (Wed open at 10am, Thu until 9pm) Sat–Sun 12–4pm

ARTISTS: Elissa Armstrong, Lisa Marie Barber, Emily Bayless, Jeremy Brooks, Larry Buller, Andréa Keys Connell, Kelcy Chase Folsom, Teri Frame, Alina Hayes, Dawn Holder, Akiko Jackson, Roxanne Jackson, Peter Christian Johnson, Qwist Joseph, Lauren Kalman, Varuni Kanagasundaram, Wansoo Kim, Nikki Lau, Steven Young Lee, Matthew Mitros, Nadia Myre, Adams Puryear, Joann Quiñones, Lauren Sandler, Mike Stumbras, Steven Thurston, and Mary Cale Wilson

ANDRÉA KEYS CONNELL

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2020 NCECA JURIED STUDENT EXHIBITION

MARCH 24–APRIL 20, 2020 artspaceZero E 4th St., Richmond, Virginia Receptions: Thursday, March 26, 5-9pm— NCECA Conference Friday, March 27, 5-9pm—Community

Artists include: Collyn Ahren, Isolina Alva. Chris Alveshere, Audrey An, Kayla Barta, Harrison Boden, Aisha Bryant, Aaron Caldwell, Uriel Caspi, Hoi Chang, Sydney Clark, Emily Connell, Torie Dombrowski, Lukas Easton, Danielle Hawk, Donte’ Hayes, Max Henderson, Emily Irvin, Jennifer Kaplan, Katie Kearns, Cindy Leung, Janet Macias, Nicole McLaughlin, Heather McLelland, Brian McNamara, Elinore Noyes, Danielle O’Malley, Jada Patterson, Luciano Pimienta, Gina Pisto, Jinblossom Plati, Samantha Purze, Andy Romero, Jessica Sanders, Hunter Saxton, Joshua Schutz, Jamin Shepherd, Lilah Shepherd, Brittany Sparks, Hailey Stammer, Kourtney Stone, RJ Sturgess, Megan Thomas, Jessica Villegas, Christopher Williams, Dallas Wooten, ChengOu Yu, and Matthew Zorn

The NCECA Juried Student Exhibition each year provides an opportunity for students across North America to show some of their best work. It is a chance for each student’s work to be seen by the largest, most diverse and concentrated group of ceramic makers, thinkers, and exhibitors. It is an opportunity unlike any other. The call for entries for the 2020 exhibition resulted in a record number of applicants in which 314 students from all levels submitted. Of all the pieces pre-sented, 50 were selected for the exhibition from 48 artists. This exhibition is a sample of the type of work being produced by students at this very moment in time. We feel it is important to acknowledge that the students that are eligible to apply for this opportunity all attend colleges and universities in North America, however, these works represent individuals from many different cultural backgrounds, all with a variety of paths that have led them to and from this occasion. This is our moment to applaud all of the students with work selected. Congratulations on a job well done!

Overall, the quality of work submitted this year provided a challenge, as jurors Salvador Jiménez-Flores and Virginia Scotchie narrowed down over 900 images to pieces they both believe best represented the way students are thinking and making across the continent. All the applicants, whether in the exhibition this year or not, deserve recognition. Thank you all for your research and time put into developing your pieces, as it is your work that will carry our field into the future. We encourage you to continue showing exactly the kind of makers, thinkers, and innovators you all are.

Welcome to Richmond!

Ashlyn Pope & Eliza Webber

NCECA Student Directors At Large

JESSICA VILLEGAS

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ADRIANA CATALAN

DANIELLA TU

NATIONAL K–12 CERAMIC EXHIBITIONCURATED BY NICOLE DUBROW AND BOB FEDER JURIED BY KEITH WILLIAMS

MARCH 25–27, 2020

GREATER RICHMOND CONVENTION CENTER, B15AReception: Wednesday, March 25, 4:30–5:30pm

Welcome members and attendees to the 23rd Annual National K–12 Ceramic Exhibition. This juried show is curated to reflect the outstanding creative depth of clay artwork by school aged youth students in the United States. The exhibition takes place in a different city each year in conjunction with the annual conference of the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA). With esteemed recognition of all students and the teachers who submit work on their behalf, this exhibition and its success are due to their passionate commitment to the ceramic arts.

This year’s juror, Keith Williams, shares with us his expert experience as artist and educator since the late 1970s. Professor of Art & Art History at Concordia University, he has served as Chairperson of the department 23 out of the last 27 years shaping the size and direction of the Concordia Department of Art and Design. He holds a MFA in Ceramics with minors in art history and drawing from Unifersity of Iowa, Iowa City and a BS in Art Education from University of Wisconsin, Madison. An avid golfer and church musi-cian, he loves to play jazz on vintage saxes in addition to his primary love of teaching. Williams has also served as a board member for the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Art’s as Director at Large, President Elect, President and Past President as well as Onsite Conference Liaison for the 2019 NCECA conference in the Twin Cities. He is now a Fellow of the Council.

Leah Schlief-Freese first curated the exhibition to high-light for public view the work of K–12 ceramic students and their teachers during a 1998 NCECA breakout session. The National K–12 Ceramic Exhibition Foundation, established in 2001 as a sustainable 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization by Dr. Bob Feder, proudly recognizes the support from NCECA for this beloved destination conference exhibition. Each year, the K–12 Clay Board of Trustees distribute more than 150 donations from dedicated artists, educators, friends and industry experts. Contributions fund over $500,000 in annual awards and study grants including 4-year col-lege ceramic arts scholarships for 12th grade High School students. Guided by Leah’s leadership, the K–12 Board is pleased to install Nicole Dubrow in 2020 as the exhibition curator. All NCECA friends and members are invited to experience the incredible student work and to consider join-ing the Nathional K–12 Ceramic Exhibition Foundation to support excellence in American ceramic art education.

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MOISES SALAZAR

NCECA 2020 CUP EXHIBITION AND SALECOORDINATED BY RICHARD WEHRS

MARCH 25–27, 2020

GREATER RICHMOND CONVENTION CENTER, B15CDrop off cup donations Wednesday–Thursday, 9am–5pm Cups on sale Friday beginning at 8am

The NCECA Cup Exhibition is a powerful demonstration of the generosity of our clay community, as members from all over, and of all skill levels, bring their contributions for dis-play and sale—all for the benefit of others through NCECA’s scholarship programs.

The NCECA Cups of Merit Award was established to recognize outstanding craftsmanship and artistic merit among these donors to the Cup Sale. Each year an NCECA-appointed panel makes Merit Awards from the cups submitted. Jurors make purchase awards totaling up to $1000 to three or more makers. Each award allows NCECA to purchase two or more cups. NCECA will retain one of the cups in its collection for as long as is practical. Cups may be periodically removed from the collection to recognize individuals for outstanding service or generosity to NCECA.

2020 NCECA MULTICULTURAL FELLOWSHIP EXHIBITIONJURIED BY YINKA ORAFIDIYA AND CANNUPA HANSKA LUGER

MARCH 25–27, 2020

GREATER RICHMOND CONVENTION CENTER, E10BReception: Tuesday, March 24, 6–8pm

“The artists communicate powerful truths, rooted at the intersection of creative skill, unmitigated passion, and cul-tural visibility. Their respective approaches to the ceramic medium resonate throughout the larger clay community.”- Yinka Orafidiya.

Visit the inaugural exhibition dedicated to artists who have been cohort members of the NCECA Multicultural Fellowship, which was launched in 2015 following the appeal of 2014 keynote speaker Theaster Gates. Now in its 6th year, the Multicultural Fellowship continues to strengthen the breadth and depth of NCECA. This exhibition of works by past fellowship recipients seeks to expand awareness of artists of color and their impact on the field of contempo-rary ceramic art.

Artists include: Abiam Alvarez, Jose Arenivar, Malene Barnett, Juana Gnecco, Tamara Hervera, Kathlyn James-Avila, Revati Jayakrishnan, Varuni Kanagasundaram, Walter Moore, Lola Ogbara, Patti Paiz-Jones, Vanna Ramirez, Moises Salazar, Antra Sinha, and Linda Zhang.

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CENTRALGREATER RICHMOND CONVENTION CENTER403 N 3rd St., Richmond 804.783.7300 richmondcenter.comTue 6–8pm Wed–Thu 9am–6pm Fri 9am–4:30pm reception: Tue Mar 24, 6–8pm on view: Mar 24–27

RM B15A23RD ANNUAL NATIONAL K–12 CERAMIC EXHIBITIONThe premier annual juried ceram-ic competition for Kindergarten through Grade 12 (K–12) students in the United States. Designed to high-light outstanding creativity with clay by school aged youth, the exhibition takes place in a different city each year in conjunction with the annual conference of the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA).

RM E10B2020 NCECA MULTICULTURAL FELLOWSHIP EXHIBITIONNCECA's Multicultural Fellowship seeks to advance diversity, depth, and breadth of ceramic art. This pro-gram expands through an exhibition representing the work of past fellows.

“The artists communicate powerful truths, rooted at the intersection of creative skill, unmitigated passion, and cultural visibility. Their respec-tive approaches to the ceramic medi-um resonate throughout the larger clay community.” – Yinka Orafidiya.Juried by Yinka Orafidiya and Can-nupa Hanska Luger. Abiam Alvarez, Jose Arenivar, Malene Barnett, Jua-na Gnecco, Tamara Hervera, Kath-lyn James-Avila, Revati Jayakrishnan, Varuni Kanagasundaram, Walter Moore, Lola Ogbara, Patti Paiz-Jones, Vanna Ramirez, Moises Salazar, Antra Sinha, and Linda Zhang.

RM E11ADELICATE MULTIPLEXWorks by Bean Finneran, Rain Harris, Janice Jakielski, Zemer Peled, Lind-say Pichaske, and Jess Riva Cooper. Organized by Lindsay Pichaske.Gallery talk by Janice Jakielski, Lind-say Pichaske, and Jess Riva Cooper: Thu Mar 26, 10am

RM E11B20/20 VISION: BALTIMORE CLAYWORKS’ 40TH ANNIVERSARYBaltimore Clayworks celebrates 40 years and all facets of our Ruby anni-versary are showcased. Kyle Bau-er, Brett Freund, Yoshi Fujii, Matt Hyleck, Ryan Kelly, Martina Lantin, Helen Otterson, Kevin Rohde, Hae Won Sohn, and Lars Westby. Orga-nized by Kevin Rohde.

RM E11C2020 INTERNATIONAL CONE BOX SHOWJuried by Winnie Owens-Hart and co-presented by Brackers Good Earth Clay and The Orton Foundation, the 2020 International Cone Box Show is this small works exhibition’s 16th edition.Karen Kohtz, Leilani Trinka, Hannah Brust, Douglas Gray, Carol Horst, Hil-de Lambrechts, CJ Niehaus, Roberta Polfus, Heather Rosenman, Susanne Sidebottom, and others.TRADITIONAL POTTERY: KULI GHANAWinnie Owens-Hart’s personal collection of traditionally created pottery by the women of the Kuli Potters Association.

DOWNTOWNHILTON RICHMOND DOWNTOWN501 E Broad St., Richmond 804.344.4300 companiongallery.com Tue–Fri 10am–9pm Sat 10am–1pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 6–9pm on view: Mar 24–28

COLLABORATIVE COMPANIONS IIIUnlikely suspects have been invit-ed to begin a conversation, in ves-sel form, geared towards discovery, cross-pollination, and understand-ing. Chanakarn Semachai, Samantha Momeyer, Mark Arnold, Katie Fee, Andrew Clark, Rebecca Zweibel, Juan Barroso, Erin Shayler, Renee LoPresti, and more. Curated by Eric Botbyl and Andrew Clark.

THE VALENTINE1015 E Clay St., Richmond 804.649.0711 thevalentine.org Tue–Sat 10am–5pm (Fri until 7pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–7pm on view: Mar 24–28

WOMEN WORKING WITH CLAY: TEN YEARS OF TELLING THE STORYFifty works by women artists who have presented at Women Working with Clay Symposia (2011–2020), cel-ebrating the diversity, stories, and accomplishments of women in the ceramic arts. Adrian Arleo, Syd Car-penter, Michelle Erickson, Julia Gallo-way, Gerit Grimm, Ayumi Horie, Beth Lo, Shoko Teruyama, Cheryl Ann Thomas, Tip Toland, and 40 others. Organized by Donna Polseno and the Eleanor D. Wilson Museum at Hollins University.

PARLOR SALON115 W Broad St., Richmond 804.338.7973 parlorva.com Tue–Wed 10am–7pm Thu–Fri 10am–6pm (Fri until 7:30pm), Sat 9am–3pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–7:30pm on view: Mar 24–28

LEATHER HARD / BONE DRY EXHIBITION & GRAPHIC NOVELWorks by six artists exploring per-sonal narrative through ceram-ic materials and processes. Molly Bishop, Ashley Bevington, Donna Flannery, Rebecca Morgan, Raven Halfmoon, and Austyn Taylor. Curat-ed by Richard Nickel.

THE WOMAN’S CLUB AT THE BOLLING HAXALL HOUSE211 E Franklin St., Richmond 804.643.2847 twcrichmond.org Wed–Fri 10am–5pm (Thu until 9pm; Fri close at 3pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 25–27

THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERSCurated by James Herring.A collaboration by Ikebana of Rich-mond and 20 clay artists to create arrangements auctioned to support organizations that strive to reduce gun violence. Ohi Toshio Chozaemon XI, Ron Meyers, McKenzie Smith, Suze Lindsay, Kent McLaughlin, Lisa Orr, Holly Hanessian, Trevor Dunn, Jenny Mendes, and Josh DeWeese.

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WESTBROAD STREETWithin .4 miles of the Convention Center

ANTENNAE8 E Broad St., Richmond 252.207.4677 toddhale.com Tue–Sun 10am–5pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 24–29

IN THE BEGINNING: JAMES MADISON UNIVERSITY ALUMNI CERAMIC SHOWThe memory of our Virginia under-graduate education strengthens and connects our commitment and passion to clay by allowing us to revisit the lessons and experiences that shaped us. Alex Johnson, Mike Brown, Elizabeth Wiley, Paul McMul-lan, Matthew Hardwick, Sanam Ema-mi, Kelly Kerr, Lindsey Augustine, Karin Solberg, Jon McMillan, and others. Organized by Alex Johnson and Matthew Hardwick.

ART 180114 W Marshall St., Richmond 804.233.4180 art180.org Mon–Fri 9am–4pm (Wed open at 10am; Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–8pm on view: Mar 6–27

WHAT I LIKE ABOUT CLAY...Work from ART 180 youth art pro-grams focusing on ceramic arts and presented in conjunction with the 2020 NCECA Conference in Rich-mond, Virginia. This exhibition includes youth artwork from ART 180 programs held at E.D. Redd Ele-mentary School, Elkhardt-Thompson Middle School, Lucille Brown Middle School, Richmond Juvenile Detention Center, and ART 180 Teen Leadership. Organized by ART 180.

BLACK IRIS GALLERY321 W Broad St., Richmond 804.539.2213, 321westbroad.com Mon–Sun 11am–7pm (Fri until 11pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 8–11pm Tea party 8pm; J. Neely & J. Steele talk: 9pm Dance Party w/ live music: 9:30–11pm on view: Mar 1–29

JURIED FUNCTIONAL TEAPOT SHOWFrom earthenware to stoneware, electric to wood-fired, we’ve picked 10 superb teapots for this inaugu-ral juried show. Functionality is our

utmost concern, so come have a cup-pa with us! Posey Bacopoulos, Helle Bovbjerg, Adriana Christianson, Dan Finnegan, Cooper Jeppesen, Adam Jennet, Noah Kildoo, Petr Novak, Chance Taylor, and Joan Ulrich. Organized by Hamish Jackson.

BOJUART POP-UP EXHIBITION17 W Broad St., Richmond 757.447.6337 bojuart.com Mon–Sat 8:30am–5:30pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 2–28

CERAMICS SUBMERGEDNarrative porcelain sculpture engag-ing with symbolic interpretation of the artists’ response to interacting with water, its properties and qual-ities. Beth Lindenberger and Donna Webb. Curated by Judy Jessen.

CANDELA BOOKS AND GALLERY214 W Broad St., Richmond 804.225.5527 candelabooks.com Tue–Fri 10am–5pm (Fri until 9pm) Sat 1–5pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 6–9pm on view: Mar 5–Apr 18

BODY, OBJECT, IMAGEWorks by women artists interpret the confluence of objects, images, and bodies through ceramic and pho-tographic processes. Jennifer Ling Datchuk, Teri Frame, Julie Malen, Margaret Meehan, Claire Sherwood, and Xia Zhang. Curated by Jason Hackett.WILD CLAYSmall silver gelatins and large digital scanned prints displayed in tandem with pin-hole cameras made from beached clay-like composites. Tim Roda. Curated by Jason Hackett.

QUIRK GALLERY207 W Broad St., Richmond 804.340.6036 quirkgallery.com Wed–Thu 9am–6pm Fri 9am–9pm Sat 10am–5pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm

FORMQuirk artists explore form through abstraction, representation, material force and metaphor. Varying perspec-tives showcase the material capa-bilities of contemporary ceramics. Andréa Keys Connell, Lilah Shepherd, Aggie Zed, Marisa Finos, Joe Kraft, Elizabeth Kendall, Molly Anne Bish-op, Jason Hackett, Gina Pisto, Emily Wicks, and Susie Ganch. Organized by Emily Wicks. On view Mar 25–28.

FUNCTIONSeven artists share fresh and inven-tive collections of functional work alongside paintings by Suzanna Fields, creating dialogues between surface, color, and design. Ginny Sims, Remy Ciuba, Eleanor Ander-son, Holly Francis, Molly Anne Bish-op, Alexis Courtney, Suzanna Fields, Elizabeth Graeber, and Leslie Argue-ta. Curated by Emily Wicks. On view Mar 25–28.MEMENTOAbstract and non-objective wall sculptures featuring textural res-in-clay surfaces and openings that reveal colored passages of collage and materials sourced from aban-doned estates and vintage dead stock. Allan Rosenbaum. Curated by Adam Dorland. On view Feb 20–Mar 29.

QUIRK HOTEL201 W Broad St., Richmond 804.340.6040 destinationhotels.com/quirk-hotel Wed–Thu 9am–6pm Fri 9am–9pm Sat 10am–5pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 25–28

INTERCHANGEWorking in pairs, artists from around the country explore the intersection of clay, metal, and jewelry and the infinite possibilities that can occur when working collaboratively. Jim Bové, Yoko-Sekino Bové, Roberta Massuch, Maria Eife, Sharon Massey, Cicely Murray, Jason Bige Burnett, Ashley Gilreath, Didem Mert, and Caroline Gore. Curated by Natalie Sweet and Maia Leppo.MEDITATIONS ON THE CYLINDERThe cylinder, a deceptively simple object, illustrates the uniquely iden-tifiable philosophies of artists across varying perspectives, histories, visions, and skills. Roxy Elahi, Bryan Hopkins, Aprille Nace, Hilda Nilsson, and Lotte Westphael. Organized by Aprille Nace. Located in hotel lobby with 24/7 access.

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SAISON MARKET323 N Adams St., Richmond 804.269.3982 saisonrva.com Mon–Sun 10am–2am on view: Mar 6–29

ECOLOGY OF LOSSExplores the interplay of change, loss, and transformation as evidenced in plant and animal life. Merenda Cecelia, Maria Stone, Paul Klassett, Hannah Wittwer, and Shawn Stone. Organized by Merenda Cecelia and Maria Stone.

SEDIMENT GALLERY208 E Grace St., Richmond 804.819.1759 sedimentarts.org Tue–Sat 10am–6pm (Fri until 9pm) Sun 1–6pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 24–Apr 25

RELIC DRIFTThe main gallery features sculptur-al ceramics imbued with evidence of human existence by Jackie Brown and Rebecca Murtaugh. Referencing mid-century modern aesthetics, the storefront has utilitarian ceramics of Gretchen Mull and Heather McCalla of Tiny Badger Ceramics. Curated by Debbie Quick.

STEAMER COMPANY NO. 5200 W Marshall St, Richmond, 804.248.5462 galleryfive.org steamercompany5.com Wed–Thu 10am-5pm Fri 10am–9pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 6–9pm on view Mar 25–27.

MONUMENTAL Showcases large scale works focused on the idea of monuments and their role in shaping collective memory, history, and communal values. Isaac Scott, Maya Vivas, Adrian Gomez, Corrin Grooms, Jasmine Baetz, James Bester, George Rodriguez, and Nikki Lau. Organized by Isaac Scott.

THE SOMEDAY SHOP22 E Broad St., Richmond 804.728.2817 facebook.com/shop.someday Tue–Fri 11am–5pm (Fri until 6pm) Sat 12–6pm Sun 12–4pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 4–6pm on view: Mar 20–30

CENTERING TO CENTER: FINDING BALANCE THROUGH CLAYCeramic works by Claire McCarty that investigate centering as a pro-cess of creation in art and life. Orga-nized by Claire McCarty and Audie McDougall.

BROAD STREET /MONROE PARK CAMPUSWithin 1 mile of the Convention Center

VCUarts FINE ART BUILDING1000 W Broad St, Richmond 804.828.1477 arts.vcu.edu/craft Mon–Fri 10am–6pm (Fri until 10:30pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 8–10:30pm on view: Mar 19–Apr 7

PLAY IT AS IT LAYSA solo exhibition by Anna Hepler featuring sculptural work made during the 2020 Spring semester Art-ist Residency at VCU’s Department of Craft / Material Studies. Curated by A. Blair Clemo.

VCUarts QATAR HOUSE1326 W Broad St., Richmond 804.828.5251 maps.vcu.edu/monroepark/qatarhouse Wed 9am–5pm Thu–Fri 9am–9pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 6–8pm on view: Mar 25–28 Not wheelchair accessible

ARAB AMERICANESQUEAn exploration of cultural memory and loss shaped through representa-tions of the lasting effects of Western Imperialism. Hannah Shaban. Orga-nized by Hannah Shaban.

VCUarts ARTS RESEARCH INSTITUTE814 W Broad St.,1st Fl., Richmond 804.828.3285 arts.vcu.edu/ari/news-2 Wed 10am–5pm Thu 10am–6pm Fri 10am–9pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 7–9pm on view: Mar 25–27

MEASURED SPACE: RICHMONDThrough the relationships of ceram-ic and mixed-media works with the surrounding architecture, Measured Space invites moments of focused recalibration of the body and place. Brian Caponi, Shawn Murrey, and Thomas Schmidt. Organized by Thomas Schmidt.

MONROE PARK CAMPUS1 mile from the Convention Center

THE ANDERSON AT VCUarts907 1/2 W Franklin St., Richmond 804.828.7720 arts.vcu.edu/programs/theanderson Wed–Thu 10am–7pm Fri 10am–9pm Sat 10am–5pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view Mar 25–28 Not wheelchair accessible

MUNDANE LIFEPorcelain sculpture, large murals and ink drawings on Hanji expressing the artist’s ruminations on everyday life experiences. Sunkoo Yuh. Curated by Chase Westfall.IMPULSE INTERIORA. Blair Clemo’s recent sculptural work employs clay applied through artistic impulse to intervene on com-Mon found objects of interior spaces. Curated by Chase Westfall.REMINISCENCE | SOUTHEAST ASIAN FEMALE ARTISTS EXHIBITIONFeatures work created by female artists of Southeast Asian descent whose work explores notions of memory in the form of installation and sculptures. Amy Sanford (Cam-bodia / USA), Colleen Toledano (Phil-ippines / USA ), Khin Thethtar Latt (Myanmar), Nia Gautama (Indonesia), Soe Yu Nwe (Myanmar), Suwanee Natewong (Thailand), and others. Organized by Soe Yu Nwe.FUTURE MEMORIESArtists of The Clay Studio Residen-cy explore the theme of transforma-tion through works that consider the experience’s effects on their work and retrospective meditations. Peter Barbor, Alex Ferrante, Lauren Mab-ry, Stephanie Kantor, Yehrim Lee, Julie Moon, Pauliina Pollanen, Mimi McPartlan, Jinsoo Song, Rebecca Chappell, and others. Curated by Jen-nifer Zwilling.WHO-IS-SHERRY?Ling Chun’s ceramic process results in surfaces that extend beyond the form, bursting with unusual, sur-prising materials including hair, to grapple with navigations of cultural identities. Curated by Chase Westfall.

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ENDLESS STREETFour artists use material to explore process and narrative through work that touches on family lies, western medicine, and shifting effects of loss on language and identity. Samuel Brown, Abigail Grix, Beatrice Evans, and Christine Orr. Curated by Chase Westfall.GROUNDWORKFeatures a curated selection of work by current VCU clay faculty and alumni of the Craft / Material Studies department working at the intersec-tion of Clay and Craft. A. Blair Clemo, Kelcy Chase Folsom, Hannah Shaban, Ben Jordan, Soojin Choi, Adam Welch, Julie Malen, Molly Anne Bishop, Quinn Hunter, Marisa Finos, and others. Organized by A. Blair Clemo.ARTIFACTS OF EXPECTATIONA collection of objects  by Matt Mitros from a series of deconstruct-ed mugs made over the course of two years that re-examine how we per-ceive the role of pottery.

SALVATION TATTOO GALLERY819 W Cary St., Richmond 804.683.2760 salvationgallery.com Tue–Sun 12–7pm on view Mar 24–29.

OF MUD AND BLOODThis collaborative exhibit explores forms created by ceramists and deco-rated by regional tattoo artists. Maria Stone, Karen Hull, Philip Mills, Chris-tine Orr, Holly Zajur, Katie Davis, James Cumberland, Nate Morretti, Mike Baker, Dave Hood, and others. Organized by Maria Stone.

CARYTOWN3 miles from the Convention Center

CHOP SUEY BOOKS2913 W Cary St., Richmond 804.422.8066 chopsueybooks.com Wed–Thu 10am–7pm Fri–Sat 10am–8pm on view: Mar 25–28

CHOP SUEY: MISCELLANEOUS LEFTOVERSA collaborative art project that blends books, functional pottery, and ceramic sculpture by Charlie Tefft, Phil Haralam and Chop Suey Books. Phil Haralam and Charlie Tefft. Orga-nized by Phil Haralam.

NORTHBANK PARTNERS3463 W Cary St., Richmond 804.250.3148 northbankpartners.com Tue–Wed 10am–5pm Thu 10am–9pm Fri 10am–8pm Sat 10am–5pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 24–28

ACROSS THE POND AND BACK: TRAINING, MAKING AND MENTORINGWork from the Winchcombe Pottery, Dan Finnegan and six of his former assistants will illustrate how tradi-tion changes with each generation. Ray Finch, Eddie Hopkins, Dan Fin-negan, Christina Bendo, Andrew Coombs, Jason Hartsoe, Beth Sperla-zza, Misha Sanborn, and Julie Wig-gins. Organized by Dan Finnegan.

FAN DISTRICT1.5 miles from the Convention Center

THE BURDENS OF HISTORY, 2020 NCECA ANNUAL EXHIBITIONInstalled within two venues, Visual Arts Center of Richmond and Glave Kocen Gallery, the 2020 NCECA Annual exhi-bition, The Burdens of History, curat-ed by Anna Walker, blends attributes of invitational and open juried models of exhibition development. Walker’s vision initiated with six invited artists with works installed at Visual Arts Cen-ter of Richmond. Themes, issues, and sensibilities of her thesis deepen and expand from the exhibition’s core with works selected through an open call for submissions installed at Glave Kocen.

GLAVE KOCEN GALLERY1620 W Main St., Richmond 804.358.1990 glavekocengallery.com Mon– Fri 11am–6pm (Wed open at 10am, Thu until 9pm), Sat–Sun 12–4pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 1–31 Wheelchair access through rear

THE BURDENS OF HISTORY, 2020 NCECA ANNUAL EXHIBITIONElissa Armstrong, Lisa Marie Barber, Emily Bayless, Jeremy Brooks, Lar-ry Buller, Andréa Keys Connell, Kel-cy Chase Folsom, Teri Frame, Alina Hayes, Dawn Holder, Akiko Jackson, Roxanne Jackson, Peter Christian Johnson, Qwist Joseph, Lauren Kal-man, Varuni Kanagasundaram, Wan-soo Kim, Nikki Lau, Steven Young Lee, Matthew Mitros, Nadia Myre, Adams Puryear, Joann Quinones, Lauren Sandler, Mike Stumbras, Ste-ven Thurston, and Mary Cale Wilson. Curated by Anna Walker.

VISUAL ARTS CENTER OF RICHMOND1812 W Main St., Richmond 804.353.0094 visarts.org Mon–Sun 9am–9pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm

THE BURDENS OF HISTORY, 2020 NCECA ANNUAL EXHIBITIONJennifer Ling Datchuk, Woody De Othello, Nicki Green, Raven Halfmoon, Issac Logsdon, and Eliz-abeth M. Webb. Curated by Anna Walker. On view Mar 20–May 31.CRITICAL FUNCTION 240 artists, jurors Carole Epp, Jill Foote-Hutton, Garth Johnson, Ber-nadette and Neil Mansfield interpret functional ceramics. Sandra Black, Sally Blair, Pattie Chalmers, Marney McDiarmid, Brenda Quinn, Lindsay Rogers, Justin Rothshank, Ibrahim Said, Andy Shaw, Lars Voltz, and oth-ers. Curated by Alex Kraft and Mela-nie Shaw. On view Mar 23–28.

PAGE BOND GALLERY1625 W Main St., Richmond 804.359.3633 pagebondgallery.com Tue–Sat 10am–5pm (Thu until 8pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 6–8pm on view: Feb 21–Mar 28

ALL FIRED UPWorks by Piero Fenci, who earned his MFA from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University and is currently a professor of art at Austin State University, Nacogdoches, Tex-as. Curated by Page Bond.SURFACE MEMORY: A GROUP EXHIBITIONSamuel Monroe Brown, Sarah Heit-meyer, Bobby Silverman, and Tzyy Yi Young’s works investigate and uti-lize the wall as a surface for display, while Linda Lopez’s porcelain ombre dust “furries” take on painterly qual-ities that exist in the round.

REYNOLDS GALLERY1514 W Main St., Richmond 804.355.6553 reynoldsgallery.com Mon–Sat 10am–5pm (Fri until 8pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–8pm on view: Feb 28–Apr 10 Not wheelchair accessible

THE LANDSCAPE IS NOT STILLDrawn, ceramic, and photographic works by Leah Raintree, engaging processes that shape earth alongside shifts in time and scale. Curated by Alice Livingston and Julia Monroe.

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ROSEWOOD POTTERY STUDIO2217 W Cary St., Richmond 804.915.9640 rosewoodpottery.com Sun (March 22)–Mon 12–5pm Tue–Sat 9am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 22–28

THE FUNCTIONAL POTOrganized by Janet C. LopatofskyThe evolution of the functional pot throughout history has been valued not only for its practical usage in but also its beautification of the home. Janet C. Lopatofsky, Kathleen Lip-inski, Tina Anderson, Carren Clarke, Jess Cullen, Lee Godwin, Jesse Gritzinger, Jacqueline Jennette, Ash-ley Jones, and Madison McDonnell.

UPTOWN GALLERY1305 W Main St., Richmond 804.353.8343 uptowngalleryrichmond.com Wed–Fri 11am–5pm (Wed open 10am; Thu close 9pm), Sat 11am–4pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Feb 1–Mar 28 Not wheelchair accessible

CONSCIOUS TRANSITIONSFive artists explore the flow of ener-gy and power of transformation through abstract sculptures that convey fluidity and movement in bal-ance with tranquility and grace. Nina Kawar, Lisa Battle, Liz Lescault, Lisa Schenkelberg, and Matt Wegleitner. Organized by Nina Kawar and Lisa Battle.

FAN DISTRICT / MONUMENT AVE2 miles from the Convention Center

BRANCH MUSEUM OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN2501 Monument Ave., Richmond 804.655.6055 branchmuseum.org Mon–Fri 10am–5pm (Fri until 9pm), Sat 10am–4pm Sun 1–5pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–8pm

INNER LIVES; CINERARY JARS BY JULIAN STAIR & ROB BARNARDFeatures cinerary jars which strip away the pomp and ceremony of death to lay bare the utilitarian tools that carry one into the afterlife. Rob Barnard and Julian Stair. Curated by Samuel Johnson. On view Mar 3–29.CUB CREEK: TWENTY YEARS TOGETHERWorks by residents and founding members of the Cub Creek Founda-tion for the Ceramic Arts, manifesting

a culmination of 20 years of a shared vision. Suk-Jin Choi, Shasta Krueger, Tom Alward, Randy Edmonson, Tom Jaszczak, Dan Molyneux, Cory Brown, Ashwini Bhat, Hitomi Shibata, and Steven Glass. Curated by How-ard Risatti; Organized by John Jes-siman; Hosted by Penelope Fletcher. On view Mar 23–29.

MAYMONT PARK2.7 miles from the Convention Center

MAYMONT ROBINS NATURE & VISITOR CENTER2201 Shields Lake Dr., Richmond 804.358.7166 maymont.org Tue–Sun 10am–5pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5:30–8pm on view: Mar 24–29

THINKING WITH ANIMALSWorks by ceramic sculptors using animal subjects to explore complex-ities of society, gender, memory, and the human relationship to nature. Ariel Bowman, Hannah Lee Camer-on, Alanna DeRocchi, Shelsea Dodd, Ben Jordan, GV Kelley, Benjamin Lambert, Susan O’Byrne, Lindsay Pichaske, Emily Nickel, and Taylor Robenalt. Organized by Ariel Bow-man and Shelsea Dodd.

MUSEUM DISTRICT2–3 miles from the Convention Center

SAINT GERTRUDE’S ART GALLERY3215 Stuart Ave., Richmond 804.358.9114 saintgertrude.org/arts/art-gallery Tue–Fri 11am–4pm Sat Mar 24 only, 11am–4pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–7pm on view: March 17–28

A MAKING CONVERSATION: ANDREA MOON AND JOHN ZIMMERMANWork that combines the necessity of making with the intention of pro-cess by investigating human empathy within a landscape of objects. Curat-ed by Jason Hackett.

SCIENCE MUSEUM OF VIRGINIA2500 W Broad St., Richmond 804.864.1400 smv.org Wed–Fri 10am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 25–27

SOMETIME: SOMEHOW: SOMEWHEREContemporary ceramic cups and mugs that evoke conversations

around the vessel as object, means of communication, and metaphor. Alex Zablocki, Ling Chun, Brent Pafford, Brett Freund, Pattie Chalmers, Nick Weddell, Matt Mitros, Keith Simpson, Brian Rochefort, and others. Orga-nized by Brent Pafford.

VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS200 N Arthur Ashe Blvd., Richmond 804.340.1405 vmfa.museum Mon–Tue 10am–5pm Wed–Fri 10am–9pm Sat–Sun 10am–5pm Artist’s Lecture: Fri Mar 27, 6pm on view: Mar 22, 2020 – Apr 26, 2021

ANNABETH ROSEN: FABLESRosen’s new work signals a radical shift in the artist’s use of color. The monumental sculptures featured are composed by binding multiple dis-crete fired elements. Curated by Val-erie Cassel Oliver.

VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, PAULEY CENTER15 N Sheppard St., Richmond vmfa.museum Mon–Fri 8:45am–4:30pm Sat 9:15am–4:30pm on view: Feb 21–Aug 16

CLOUDSEEDSWall-based sculpture by VMFA Fel-lowship recipient Jon McMillan. Evocative works that explore the relationship between the natural world and the built environment.

SCOTT’S ADDITION3 miles from the Convention Center

CLAYWORKS SUPPLIES RICHMOND2277 Dabney Rd, Richmond 804.918.7722 clayworkssupplies.com Mon–Fri 10am–5pm (Wed until 6pm, Fri until 9pm) Sat 10am–-4pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 7–9pm on view: Mar 25–28

VIRGINIA WOOD-FIRING POTTERSWork by wood-firing potters through-out Virginia expressing a wide vari-ety of possible surfaces and firing techniques. Noah Hughey-Commers, Kevin Crowe, Adam McNeil, Dan Finnegan, Warren Frederick, Cath-erine White, John Jessiman, Lindsay Oesterritter, Shawn Grove, Randy Edmonson, and others. Organized by Kevin Crowe.

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IRIDIAN GALLERY1407 Sherwood Ave., Richmond 804.622.4646 diversityrichmond.org/iridian Mon–Sat 9am–6pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 6–28

TRANS-CENDENT: THE T IS NOT SILENTCeramic works examining inequality, prejudice, and fears of otherness sur-rounding the LGBTQIA community.Mac McCusker and Finwall Scott. Curated by Debbie Quick.

SCOTT’S VIEW3410 W Clay St., Richmond 804.449.7440 scottsviewrva.com Wed–Sat 10am–6pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 25–28

RETENTION SPACEBrings together a group of artists reacting to the urban experience and its impact on memory. Aimee Odum, Trevor King, Anders Hamilton, Ryan Rennie, Dini Dixon, Adams Puryear, Cammi Climaco, and Gustav Ham-ilton. Organized by Adams Puryear.PETERS VALLEY: PRESENTCelebrating 50 years of Peters Valley School of Craft, Peters Valley: Pres-ent reacts to the last two decades of programming designed by Ceramic Department Head and artist, Bruce Dehnert. Ashwini Bhat, Bennett Bean, Bruce Dehnert, James Lawton, David MacDonald, Andrea Marquis, Mau-reen Mills, Malcolm Mobutu Smith, Kristin Muller, Doug Peltzman, and many others. Curated by Carolyn E Herrera-Perez.

STUDIO TWO THREE3300 W Clay St., Richmond 804.254.7302 studiotwothree.org Tue 11am–5pm Wed 10am–9pm Thu–Sun 11am–5pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5-9pm on view: Mar 25–28

BEING AND NOTHINGNESS2019 Regina Brown Fellowship recip-ients present installations involving fired and unfired clay that is merged with technology and abstraction to recontextualize clay as a material. Emily Gordon and Charles Barger. Organized by Emily Gordon.

THE HIGHPOINT3300 W Broad St., Richmond 804.254.2763 thehighpointrichmond.com Mon–Sun 10am–6pm (Thu–Fri until 9pm) open house w/ artist talk: Mon Mar 23, 4–7pm receptions: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm Fri Mar 27 5–9pm; Artist talk at 7pm on view: Feb 28–Apr 17 Pop-up Ceramics market open all week

MURMURATIONSIsabelle Coppinger’s site-specific, hand-carved ceramic wall installa-tions are inspired by patterns in the natural world. Curated by Claire Accardo and David Morrison.

WEST END4.5 miles from the Convention Center.

CROSSROADS ART CENTER2016 Staples Mill Rd., Richmond 804.278.8950 crossroadsartcenter.com Mon–Fri 10am–6pm (Fri until 9pm) Sat 10am–4pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 23–28

INTO THAT DARKNESS PEERINGInterdisciplinary perspectives applied to ceramic-based works incorporating black or dark motifs in material, lighting, and metaphor. Rain Harris, Dennis Ritter, Kate Rob-erts, Kyle Triplett, and Casey Whitti-er. Organized by Kyle Triplett.

FAR WEST END6–7 miles from the Convention Center

ST. CATHERINE’S SCHOOL6001 Grove Ave., Richmond 540.383.8874 st.catherines.org Mon–Fri 10am–3:30pm on view: Mar 23–30

CORNERSTONEA student returns to work along-side their first ceramics mentor to explore the cornerstone quality that mugs and this institution have had on their work. Spencer Dewey and Claire McCarty. Organized by Claire McCarty.

UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND MUSEUMS453 Westhampton Way, Richmond 804.287.6614 museums.richmond.edu Mon–Tue 1–5pm Wed 10am–5pm Thu 1–5pm Fri 1–6pm Sat–Sun 1–5pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 4–6pm on view: Sep 20 2019–May 1

CONTINUUM: CONTEMPORARY CERAMICS IN HISTORICAL CONTEXTAn exploration of continuing themes evident in the works of contemporary ceramic artists, juxtaposing their ceramics with historical works from the museum’s permanent collection. Stephen Addiss, Cricket Edmonson, Randy Edmonson, Steven Glass, John Jessiman, Jeff Vick, and Catherine White. Curated by Richard Waller.

SOUTHSHOCKOE BOTTOM1 mile from the Convention Center

GALANIDES LAW OFFICES1561 E Main St., Richmond 804.977.0110 vadefensecounsel.com Mon–Thu 9am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) Fri 10am–2pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 23–27

OUR PAST SHAPES OUR PRESENTWorks by seven artists investigat-ing mind / body correlations and the relationship of tactility with neuro-plasticity. Linda Cordell, Samantha Henneke, Kristen Kieffer, Aysha Peltz, Elizabeth Vorlicek, Adero Willard, and Blake Jamison Williams. Orga-nized by Elizabeth Vorlicek and Blake Jamison Williams.

LADIFF125 S 14th St., Richmond 804.648.6210 ladiff.com Tue–Sat 10am–6pm (Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 6–8pm on view: Mar 24–28

ECHO ECHOCurrent resident artists of Pottery Northwest exhibit new works created in response to masterworks from the permanent collection. Anyuta Gusa-koVA. Amanda Salov, Chase Lille-holm, Jake Brodsky, Ling Chun, Soe Yu Nwe, Tzyy Yi Young, with Doug Humble, Clary Illian, Richard Notkin, and Beth Cavener. Curated by James Lobb.

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MAIN STREET STATION GALLERY1500 E Main St., Richmond 804.646.1862 mainstreetstationrichmond.com Wed–Sat 8am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm

TABLE+WARE 2020Furniture and vessel makers team together to create table settings for two. Inspired by a shared meal, artists / collaborators ponder this uniquely human experience. Jim Lawton, Birdie Boone, David Eichel-berger, Jennifer Ling Datchuk, Sean O’Connell, Beth Lo, Bill Brouillard, and seven furniture maker collabora-tors from across the USA. Organized by Jim Lawton. On view Mar 24–28.VECTORS: THE ARTAXIS FELLOWSHIP IN ITS FIRST FOUR YEARSSix Artaxis Fellowship recipients join four Fellowship jurors in con-versation about education, oppor-tunity, inclusion, legacy, and the future of ceramics. Natalia Arbelaez, Morel Doucet, Kathy Garcia, Raven Halfmoon, Donté Hayes, Neha Kud-chadkar, Linda Lopez, Soe Yu Nwe, Moises Salazar, and Amy Santoferra-ro. Curated by Artaxis. On view Mar 25–28.TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE SELFTransformations of the ephemeral to the material through lattice-like structures of clay. Eliza Au, Andrea Marquis, and Shiyuan Xu. Organized by Eliza Au. On view Mar 25–28.

RICHBRAU BREWERY5 S 20th St., Richmond 804.621.4100 richbraubrewing.com Wed–Thu 3–10pm Fri 2pm–12am reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–7pm on view: Mar 25–27

WHAT IS IN BETWEENMaking objects to manifest mem-ories, the artists reveal the silver lining found in a memory of some-thing lost. Blanca Guerra-Echever-ria, Rachel Eng, Ashlyn Pope, Will Preman, Mitch Shiles, Kate Roberts, Judd Schiffman, and Casey Whittier. Organized by Rachel Eng.

RISE FOR YOUTH1705 E Main St., Richmond 804.709.8780 riseforyouth.org Wed 10pm–8pm Thu 2–9pm Fri 2pm–12am, Sat 2–6pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 25–28 Not wheelchair accessible

JOY RIDEFigurative sculpture and narrative vessels by Kelsey Duncan and Jes-sica Brandl who critically explore the confluence of memory, physi-cal landscape, popular iconography, and tropes of representation. Jessi-ca Brandl and Kelsey Duncan. Orga-nized by Jessica Brandl and Kelsey Duncan.

RIVERFRONT PLAZA901–951 E Byrd St., Richmond 804.780.0800 riverfrontplazarichmond.com Wed 10am–6pm Thu–Fri 8am–6pm (Thu until 7pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–7pm on view: Mar 25–27

A TOUR OF 16 HANDS: 22 YEARS OF MAKINGMembers of the 16 Hands Studio Tour, based in Floyd, Virginia, pres-ent a retrospective of current and past members’ work. Josh Copus, Andrea Denniston, Silvie Granatel-li, Seth Guzovsky, Hona Leigh Knud-sen, Josh Manning, Sarah McCarthy, Donna Polseno, Ellen Shankin, Wen-dy Werstlein, and many others. Orga-nized by Andrea Denniston.NEW CERAMICS IN THE OLD DOMINION: VIRGINIA POTTERSUtilitarian pottery by 19 leading potters in Virginia. The range of approaches highlights the excep-tional work currently being created throughout the state. David Crane, A. Blair Clemo, Kevin Crowe, Michelle Erickson, Silvie Granatelli, Marlene Jack, Blair Meerfeld, Lindsay Oes-territter, Donna Polseno, Catherine White, and others. Organized by Jon McMillan and Mike Jabbur.

SHOCKOE ARTSPACE12 N 19th St., Richmond 209.740.0916 shockoeartspace.com Wed 10am–5pm Thu–Sat 11am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 6–9pm on view: Mar 2–May 30

ETERNALThemes of utility, death, and romance explored through an arrangement of objects and sculptures in ceramic and mixed media. Wade Folger Mac-Donald and Jason Hackett. Curated by Ryan Lauterio.

SHOCKOE ARTSPACE STUDIOS1903 E. Franklin St., Ste. 114, Richmond 209.740.0916 shockoeartspace.com Wed 10am–5pm Thu–Sat 11am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 6–9pm on view: Mar 25–28

WHAT WE HOLDSculptural works that draw from con-nections of the vessel and the body throughout history. Elissa Arm-strong, A. Blair Clemo, and Trey Hill. Curated by Ryan Lauterio.

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY1716 E Main St., Richmond 804.775.0832 shockoebottomclay.com Mon–Wed 10am–5pm Thu–Fri 10am–9pm Sat 10am–3pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm

CLAY AND LIFEA survey of contemporary ceram-ic works in diverse styles and techniques by artists engaged in partnerships that balance creativ-ity, career and love. Over twenty partners including Daniel & Caro-line Bottom Anderson, Randy & Jan McKeachie-Johnston, Chris Gustin & Nancy Train Smith, Peter Beasecker & Liz Lurie, Eva Kwong & Kirk Man-gus. Organized by Dan Anderson. On view Mar 23–27.DISRUPTIONBrings the work of four women of colour into dialogue through an intersectional feminist lens to dis-rupt the white male dominant canon in surprisingly hopeful ways. Natalia Arbelaez, Magdolene Dykstra, Habiba El-Sayed, and Heidi McKenzie. Orga-nized by Heidi McKenzie. On view Mar 24–28

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY STUDIOS & GALLERY1714 E Main St., Richmond 804.775.0832 shockoebottomclay.com Mon–Wed 10am–5pm Thu–Fri 10am–9pm Sat 10am–6pm Sun 10am–4pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 6–31

ONE...OUT OF MANYLarge-scale installations incorporate porcelain to evoke abstract impres-sions that upon close observation of individual pieces, encouraging view-ers to connect with personal mem-ories of time and place. Grace Eun Mi Lee and Tracy Shell. Curated by Susan Gaible.

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MANCHESTER1.5–2.7 miles from the Convention Center

ARTSPACEZero E 4th St., Richmond 804.232.6464 artspacegallery.org Tue–Fri 10am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) NJSE Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm; Community Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 24–Apr 19

2020 NCECA JURIED STUDENT EXHIBITIONNCECA’s cornerstone exhibition is open to students in higher educa-tion programs throughout the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. More than 300 artists submitted a total of near-ly 1,000 images for consideration by ceramic artists Virginia Scotch-ie and Salvador Jiménez-Flores. Collyn Ahren, Isolina AlVA. Chris Alveshere, Audrey An, Kayla Barta, Harrison Boden, Aisha Bryant, Aar-on Caldwell, Uriel Caspi, Hoi Chang, Sydney Clark, Emily Connell, Torie Dombrowski, Lukas Easton, Dan-ielle Hawk, Donte’ Hayes, Max Hen-derson, Emily Irvin, Jennifer Kaplan, Katie Kearns, Cindy Leung, Janet Macias, Nicole McLaughlin, Heath-er McLelland, Brian McNamara, Eli-nore Noyes, Danielle O’Malley, Jada Patterson, Luciano Pimienta, Gina Pisto, Jinblossom Plati, Samantha Purze, Andy Romero, Jessica Sanders, Hunter Saxton, Joshua Schutz, Jamin Shepherd, Lilah Shepherd, Brittany Sparks, Hailey Stammer, Kourtney Stone, RJ Sturgess, Megan Thomas, Jessica Villegas, Christopher Wil-liams, Dallas Wooten, ChengOu Yu, and Matthew Zorn.

ART WORKS320 Hull St., Richmond 804.291.1400 artworksrichmond.com Tue 12–6pm Wed 10–6pm Thu–Fri 12–9pm Sat–Sun 12–6pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 6–9 pm on view: Mar 24–Apr 18

RVA-CLAY, THE INFLUENCE OF TIME ON A CLAY COMMUNITYA juried exhibition celebrating 50 years of Richmond’s clay community and showcasing the talented works of local clay artists working in various styles and techniques. Organized by Lee Hazelgrove.SMALL OFFERINGSThe work of Kay Franz is an explo-ration of surface textures, imag-es, colors, and fired finishes within a framework of consistently built forms. Organized by Kay Franz.

SUSPENDEDSix ceramic sculptors whose work migrated from pedestal to wall, chal-lenging the traditional view of sculp-ture and embracing the perceived limitations and fragility of clay. Lau-rel Lukaszewski, Lisa Battle, Amy Dov, Tamara Laird, Judit Varga, and Jodi Walsh. Organized by Laurel Lukaszewski, and Lisa Battle.

CARAVATI’S104 E 2nd St., Richmond 804.232.4175 caravatis.com Tue–Fri 8:30am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) Sat 10am–5pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 24–28

MONOCACY RIVER POTTERY GROUP: A CONSCIOUS COLLECTIVEA vibrant wood fire community from Maryland showcases their eclectic work, ranging from functional ves-sels to large sculptures, with an exciting range of surface treatments. Stephanie Basralian, Lisa Battle, Jim Dugan, Brian Grow, Greg Holmes, Ken Kaufman, Shannon McArd-le-Dugan, Ryan McDonnell, Aby Mil-ner, Vianney Paul, and Hunt Prothro. Organized by Hunt Prothro.

FOCAL POINT SPACE2622 Hull St., Richmond 302.632.2942 focalpoint.space Mon–Wed 10am–5pm Thu 12–9pm Fri–Sun 10am–5pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 6–9pm on view: Mar 23–29

UNSETTLED LANDSolo exhibition of Elliott Kayser’s representational sculptures address-ing modern agricultural practices. Curated by Alexis Courtney, Spon-sored by Hand / Thrown Studio.

TEKTONICS DESIGN GROUP702 E 4th St., Richmond 804.233.5900 tektonics.com Wed-Fri 10am-5pm (Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 24–27

TESTING GROUNDSix artists explore new, experimen-tal methods including video, digital technologies, and representation of sound through form and color. Les-ley Baker, Tom Lauerman, Megumi Naitoh, Debbie Reichard, Sue Whit-more, and Matt Ziemke. Organized by Lesley Baker.

THE SILOS ARTIST COLLECTIVE2 Manchester Rd, Fl.2, Richmond 574.261.7103 facebook.com/thesilosrva Tue–Fri 12–5pm (Wed open at 10am Sat 12–5pm, 6-12am reception: Sat Mar 28, 6pm–12am on view: Mar 24–28 Not wheelchair accessible

CLAY EMBODIEDFeatures sculptural works from some of the most innovative ceramic art-ists in the United States, exploring clay as an echo of life on our planet, moving yet static. Christopher David White, Marta Finkelstein, Calvin Ma, Tim Mather, Malcolm Mobutu Smith, Annie Campbell Belcher, Keira Nor-ton, Richard James, Rob Kolhouse, Katie Jacobs, Christie Cooper, Jason Harper, and more. Organized by Mar-ta Finkelstein and Christopher David White.

SOUTHSIDE3–4 miles from the Convention Center

RVA NEST3404 Semmes Ave., Richmond 804.233.0134 facebook.com/rvanest Tue–Sat 10am–6pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5-9pm on view: Mar 24–28

JASON BRIGGS, PLEASE MAY I TOUCH IT?While my pieces contain obvious visual references, I am more inter-ested in the implied tactile ones; the things that stir in us a bewildering compulsion to touch. Organized by Jason Briggs.

43RD STREET GALLERY1412 W 43rd St., Richmond 804.233.1758 43rdstgallery.com Mon–Sat 10am–6pm (Fri until 8pm) Sun 12–5pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 4–8pm on view: Mar 14–Apr 16

HOW WE’VE CHANGED; CLAY INVITATIONALInvitational show of 10 recognized clay artisans from the Richmond area showing their work past and pres-ent, focusing on creative changes as work evolves and matures over time. Lee Hazelgrove, Diana Cole, Robin Cage, Barbara Mann, Carren Clarke, Kay Franz, Steven Summerville, Joel Moses, Nancy Sowder, and Steven Glass. Organized by Robin Cage.

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RIVER FOX REALTY4803 Forest Hill Ave., Richmond 804.887.0700 riverfoxrealty.com Wed–Sun 9am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 6–9pm on view: Mar 25–29

THE CERAMICS FORUM: 10 YEARS TOWARDS THE DIALOGUEShowcasing works by participants in The Ceramics Forum, developed by Prof. Hoon Lee to foster critical discourse between invited graduate students and Grand Valley State Uni-versity students. Wansoo Kim, Brian Caponi, Josh Clark, Brett Evans, Ben Harle, Patrick Kingshill, Virginia Pis-to, Josh Schutz, Kushala Vora, Brian Westrick, and many others. Curated by Sean Larson.

EASTCHURCH HILL1.4 miles from the Convention Center

1910 PRINCESS ANNE AVE.1910 Princess Anne Ave., Richmond, VA 828.412.2308 Wed–Fri 10–9pm Sat 10am– 6pm reception: Thu Mar 27, 6–9pm on view Mar 25–28 Not wheelchair accessible

MYTH, MEMORY, AND THE MINDArtists explore clay’s potency as a vehicle for storytelling, including the installation, Mindful Mindlessness: A Ceramic History of Rock and Roll by Porcelain Beach. Anja Bartels, Nich Daunis, Sara Ballek, Laurie Caffery Harris, Mike Zukoski, Julia Claire Weber, Amy Briggs, Tyler Ander-son, Molly Morningglory, and Gabri-el Kline. Organized by Gabriel Kline.

ERIC SCHINDLER GALLERY2305 E Broad St., Richmond 804.644.5005 ericschindlergallery.com Tues–Sat 11am–5pm (Wed open at 10am; Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 24–Apr 3 Not wheelchair accessible

GODS AND GHOSTSFree yourself and discover a secret world of remarkable, sensational realms and stories that inspire mag-ic and happiness. A hidden gem in Church Hill. Julie Elkins.

ROCKETT’S LANDING2.5–3 miles from the Convention Center

ICON REALTY4833 Old Main St., Richmond 804.775.2000 iconrealtyrva.com Tue–Sat 10am–5pm (Thu until 9pm) reception: Thu Mar 26, 6–8pm on view: Mar 24–28

crossXcultureA crossroads where four women meet clay, mindfulness and memory for a unique collaborative table setting. Jennifer Allen, Birdie Boone, Hitomi Shibata, and Stacy Snyder. Organized by Birdie Boone.

THE BOATHOUSE AT ROCKETTS LANDING4708 E Old Main St., Richmond 804.622.2628 boathouseva.com Wed–Fri 10am–9pm Sat 10am–3pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–7pm on view: Mar 23–28

UT PROSIM – SO THAT I MAY SERVEThis exhibit, the title of which comes from Virginia Tech’s official mot-to, pays tribute to David Crane’s 38-year career as artist and educator by showing work of former students David Crane, Silvie Granatelli, Stacy Snyder, Susan Filley, David Eichel-berger, Dara Hartman, Mike Jabbur, Andrew Gilliatt, Josh Manning, Kris-ten Swanson, Joey Sheehan, and Lau-ren Adams. Organized by Andrew Gilliatt and Mike Jabbur.

TRIPLE CROSSING BREWERY5203 Hatcher St., Richmond 804.495.1955 triplecrossing.com Wed–Thu 1–10pm Fri–Sun 12–10pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9pm on view: Mar 25–28

CALLING TO WHO WE ARECeramic artists explore narratives on human evolution and connection. Juan Barroso, Paul S. Briggs, Syd Car-penter, Marisa Finos, Cannupa Hans-ka Luger, Donte’ K. Hayes, Jeanine Hill, and Debbie Quick. Organized by Jeanine Hill.HIND-SITESticky Gold Collective members melt, ooze and build a multivalent chroni-cle through a mingling of traditional ceramics with non-traditional mate-rials. Francesca ‘Checa’ Baldarelli, Sydney Ewerth, Ben Galaday, Padyn Humble, Matt Mitros, Danni O’Brien, and Matthew Drennan Wicks. Orga-nized by Sydney Ewerth.

NORTHNORTHSIDE2 miles from the Convention Center

HAND / THROWN STUDIO123 W Brookland Pk Blvd., Richmond 434.806.4614 handthrown.studio Mon–Thu 10am–5pm (Wed open 9am) Fri 12–9pm Sat–Sun 10am–5pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 6-9pm on view: Mar 22–29

SHIFT WORKArtists of Hand / Thrown Studio explore impermanence, community, time and material. In conversation with one another and independently, they create contemporary ceramics reflecting a shared experience. Alexis Courtney, Emily Wicks, Remy Ciuba, Natalie Kohlhepp, Katie Taylor, and Jocelyn Sandberg. Organized by Emi-ly Wicks and Alexis Courtney.

ALMA’S RVA224 W Brookland Park Blvd, 1st Fl., Richmond 804.269.3973 almasrva.com Mon–Sat 11am–7pm (Wed open 9am; Fri 10am–9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 6–9pm on view: Mar 23–28

THE COLOR NETWORK PRESENTS: CONSTRUCTORS IN CLAYA multi-generational group of artists who play leading roles in clay— with varied perspectives on leadership’s meanings, collectively, the exhibition adds to the discussion of contempo-rary issues in ceramic art. Malcolm Mobutu Smith, Winnie Owens-Hart, Bobby Scroggins, Gerald Brown, Courtney Leonard, Roberto Lugo, Isaac Scott, and Paul Briggs. Orga-nized by The Color Network.

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SUBURBS AND REGIONAL10 miles or more from the Convention Center; listed by increasing distance

HENRICOVIRGINIA TECH2810 N Parham Rd, Ste 300, Henrico, VA 804.662.7298 richmond.vt.edu Wed 8am–5pm Thu–Fri 8am–9:30pm Sat 10am–5pm Sun 11–3pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 5–9:30pm on view: Mar 25–29

CONTEMPLATIVE CLAY: MINDFUL MAKING AT VIRGINIA TECHA robust collection of contemplative ceramic objects by current and past students, faculty, and staff of Vir-ginia Tech. Martha Sullivan, Ellen Braaten, Enrique Ruiz Geli, Teresa Moriarty, Stacy Snyder, Jonathan Rugh, Jason Norfleet, Jon Hamiliton, Megan Carter, Adam Lake, Dara Hart-man, and many others. Organized by Martha Sullivan.ANCIENT TO MODERN: CERAMIC OBJECTS OF VIRTUExplores beauty, the value of mak-ing, & the trajectory of humankind through ceramic artifacts from the Library of Material Culture, collect-ed by Bill Green, Industrial Design professor at Virginia Tech. A time-line of historic ceramics from Egypt, Rome, China, Japan, North and South America, all across Europe, and more. Curated by Martha Sullivan.

GLEN ALLENCULTURAL ARTS CENTER AT GLEN ALLEN, GUMENICK GALLERY2880 Mountain Rd., Glen Allen, VA 804.261.2787 artsglenallen.com Mon–Fri 9am–8pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 6–8pm on view: Mar 23–28

THE WHOLE IS SOMETHING ELSEA survey of artists utilizing ceram-ics and the language of installation to breach a collective memory and make space for their viewers to inhabit. Emily Bayless, Ashley Jude Jonas, Brittany Mojo, Jeanne Quinn, Amy Santoferraro, Casey Whittier, and Mary Cale A. Wilson. Organized by Emily Bayless.

ASHLANDFLIPPO GALLERYPace-Armistead Hall Department of Fine Arts Randolph-Macon College 211 N Center St., Ashland, VA 804.752.3018 rmc.edu/departments/studio-arts/flippo-gallery Mon–Sat 10am–4pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 3–5pm on view: Feb 23–Mar 28

RE-PRESENTATIONS12 vessel makers who typical-ly emphasize form exhibit ceram-ic works alongside drawings. The 2-dimensional works are direct or indirect responses to the 3-dimen-sional forms. Candice Methe, Chris Gustin, Chris Staley, Hiroe Hanazono, Jane Shellenbarger, Katie Fee, Lind-say Oesterritter, Maggie Jaszczak, Mark Pharis, and Stuart Gair. Orga-nized by Mike Jabbur and Birdie Boone.

MIDLOTHIANTYLER GALLERYJohn Tyler Community College 800 Charter Colony Pkwy Eliades Hall, Rm E107 Midlothian, VA 804.594.1457 jtcc.edu/academics/ the-arts-at-tyler Mon–Sun 12–5pm (Fri until 8pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–8pm on view: Mar 16–29

HOMOGENOUS BODIESCeramic and mixed media installa-tion / performance representing “The Ground” (clay) as a foundational and connective tissue between cultures and species. Stephen-Bernard Derek Callender. Curated by Jason Hackett.

BELLA ARTE GALLERY3734 Winterfield Rd., Midlothian, VA 804.794.1511 bella-arte.com Wed–Thu 10am–6pm Fri 10am–7pm Sat 10am–4pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–7pm on view: Mar 25–28

TRUTHS AND DIALOGUESThree Person Exhibition exploring the figure through diverse approach-es, materials and concepts and find-ing meaning within new contexts through the power of storytelling. Angel DiCosola, Marsha Karagheu-sian, and Lisa Merida-Paytes. Orga-nized by Lisa Merida-Paytes.

PETERSBURGPETERSBURG AREA ART LEAGUE7 E Old St., Petersburg, VA 804.539.1927 paalart.org Wed-Sat 10am–5pm reception: Thu Mar 26, 6–8pm on view: Mar 25–28

LAUGHING IN CLAYToo often dismissed as lowbrow or lacking intellect, artists work with humor in clay to convey content. RJ Sturgess, Stuart Asprey, Ashley Bev-ington, Andrew Adamson, Rachel Ballard, Tommy Frank, Travis Win-ters, Brett Kern, TJ Erdahl, and Han-nah Pierce. Organized by RJ Sturgess.

30 FRANKLIN30 Franklin St., Petersburg, VA 804.590.7988 whowardmyersenterprisesllc.com Tue–Sat 9am–5pm reception: Wed Mar 25, 10am-5pm on view: Mar 24–28

BAD IDEAThrough quirky interpretation and parody, Bad Idea showcases artists who live without regret and invite others to find moments of joy in our continually overwhelming world. Ginger Lukas, Peter Morgan, Adams Puryear, Jason Lee Starin, Charity Thackston, and Michael Welsh. Orga-nized by Jason Starin.

APPOMATTOX TILE ART COMPANY113 W Bank St., Petersburg, VA. 804.732.8810 appomattoxtileart.com Tue–Sat 9am–5pm reception: Wed Mar 25, 2–5pm on view Mar 24–28

AMERICAN ARTIFACTSObjects which serve to construct a sense of national identity cannot be separated from their physicality. They continue to be our memory. A diary for perpetuity, written in form. Gina Adams, Larry Buller, Raheleh Filsoofi, Quinn Hunter, Bri Murphy, Sarah Rowe, and Erik Zohn. Orga-nized by Bri Murphy and Erik Zohn.

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PETERSBURG PUBLIC LIBRARY201 W Washington St., Petersburg, VA 804.733.2387 ppls.org Mon–Thu 10am–8pm Fri–Sat 10am–5pm reception: Wed Mar 25, 2–5pm on view: Mar 23–28

ALTERNATE ENDINGS 3: CONTEMPORARY CERAMIC BOOKENDSAn exhibit of bookends presented in a public library. The artists chosen for this exhibition range from emerging to established, and represent a wide variety of ways of working. Rain Har-ris, Steven Young Lee, Amy Santofer-raro, Carole Epp, Courtney Leonard, Seth Rainville, Shoji Satake, Arthur Halvorsen, Amy Smith, and Paul S. Briggs. Curated by Bryan Hopkins and Mac McCusker.

CAMERON BUILDING325 Brown St., Petersburg, VA 804.590.7988 whowardmyersenterprisesllc.com Tue–Sat 9am–5pm reception: Wed Mar 25, 2–5pm on view: Mar 24–28

FINDING NATURETime spent outdoors fosters oppor-tunities to cultivate mindfulness and allows the natural world to influence our beingness and the works we cre-ate. Deighton Abrams, Alice Ballard, Nina Kawar, Elaine Quave, Sandy Singletary, Michael Vatalaro, Megan Wolfe, and Valerie Zimany. Organized by Elaine Quave.

FREDERICKSBURGDUPONT GALLERY, UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON1301 College Ave., Fredericksburg, VA 540.654.1013 umwgalleries.org Mon–Fri 10am–4pm Sat–Sun 1pm–4pm on view: Feb 6–Mar 29

UMW CERAMICS: 50 YEARS OF FACULTY AND ALUMNIThis retrospective exhibition show-cases the diverse artwork of faculty and alumni from the University of Mary Washington’s ceramics pro-gram over the past 50 years. Debra Balestreri, Christina Bendo, Hadri-an Mendoza, Lorene Nickel, Misha Sanborn, Tracy Shell, Katie Sleyman, Beth Sperlazza, Maria Stone, Sarah Spencer White and more. Organized by Jon McMillan.

LIBERTYTOWN ARTS WORK-SHOP916 Liberty St., Fredericksburg, VA 540.371.7255 libertytownarts.com Mon–Sat 10am–8pm (Tue until 11pm), Sun 10am–6pm reception: Tue Mar 24, 5–11pm Artist demonstrations from 6–10pm on view: Mar 6–Apr 1

LIBERTYTOWN PRESENTS: POTTERY ON THE HILLPots for use by the 30 makers who have exhibited at Pottery on the Hill, the annual show and sale held on Capitol Hill in Washington DC. Dan Finnegan, Jenny Mendes, Mark Hewitt, Catherine White, Lisa Orr, Mark Shapiro, Bandana Pottery, Matt Metz, Donna Polseno, Andrea Den-niston, and many others. Curated by D.D. Lecky.

PONSHOP STUDIO712 Caroline St., Fredericksburg, VA 540.656.2215 ponshopstudio.com Mon–Sun 10am–7pm (Fri until 8pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–8pm on view: Mar 1–31

ADORNCeramic materials and processes inform contemporary explorations of jewelry through color, form and detail. Joelle Ferrara, Jenna Vanden Brink, Scarlett Pons, and Rachel Vit-ko. Organized by Scarlett Pons.

FARMVILLELONGWOOD UNIVERSITY: BEDFORD ART GALLERY201 High St., Farmville, VA 434.395.2462 longwood.edu Mon–Sun 10am–7pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 15–Apr 5

SURFACE EXPLORATION – FROM THE UNCANNY, THE UNCOUTH, TO THE SUBLIMEIn ceramics, form is paramount, but it is surface that offers the greatest freedom of expression and provides a tie that binds. Dan Molyneux, Mere-dith Host, Adrian Sandstrom, Hidemi Tokutake, Seth Rainville, Aaron Scythe, John Oles, Hannah Cameron, Adam Redd, Stewart Gair, and many others. Curated by Adam Paulek.

LONGWOOD UNIVERSITY: BEDFORD HALL201 High St., Farmville, VA 434.395.2462 longwood.edu Mon–Sun 10am–7pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 15–Apr 5

LONGWOOD UNIVERSITY WORKING ARTIST PROGRAM PAST AND PRESENTThis show represents the artists who have participated in Longwood Uni-versity’s Working Artist Program in its inception to the present. August Oster, Kirk Jackson, Dan Molyneux, Nick Listo, Emily Vandermey, Mack-enzie Lenhart, Holly Strohl, Cole Worden, Alyssa Smitherman, Eliza-beth McAdams, Vianney Clausse, and Jessica Kanaley. Curated by Adam Paulek.

LONGWOOD CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS129 N Main St., Farmville, VA 434.395.2206 lcva.longwood.edu Tue–Sat 11am–5pm (Fri until 8pm) Sun 1–5pm reception: Fri Mar 27, 5:30–8pm on view: Mar 24–31

PORCELAIN BRIDGEThree porcelain artists from two dif-ferent countries, Japan and the U.S. Masaya Imanishi, Dr. Hirotake Iman-ishi, and Adam Paulek. Curated by Randy Edmonson.STEPHEN ADDISS: TEABOWLSPresents a selection of stoneware and porcelain teabowls by the renowned artist / art historian.Curated by Randy Edmonson.WOODFIREAn invitational exhibition of ceramic artists whose work has focused on wood firing. Dan Molyneux, Chris Gustin, Tim Rowan, Peter Callas, Ted Neal, Jan McKeachie Johnston, Ran-dy Johnston, John Neely, and others. Curated by John Jessiman.

MOTON MUSEUM900 Griffin Blvd., Farmville, VA 434.395.2462 motonmuseum.org Mon–Sun 9am–4pm (Fri until 9pm) reception: Fri Mar 27, 5–9pm on view: Mar 15–Apr 5

KEVIN SNIPES SOLO EXHIBITIONThe Moton Museum in Farmville, Virginia presents a solo exhibition of ceramic work by Kevin Snipes, whose narratives strive to represent unity, joy, and the complex nature of social interaction. Curated by Adam Paulek.

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CHARLOTTESVILLETHE BARN SWALLOW796 Gillums Ridge, Charlottesville, VA 434.979.4884 thebarnswallow.com Mon–Sat 10–5pm; Sun 12–5pm on view: Mar 23–29

MEMORY OF CLAY: WORKS BY JANICE ARONE AND MARY ANN BURKA testimony of two potters making a living from ceramics, exhibited in the 1800’s barn they turned into a gallery 20 years ago. Janice Arone and Mary Ann Burk. Organized by Janice Arone and Mary Ann Burk.

CITY CLAY700 Harris St., Charlottesville, VA 434.293.0808 cityclaycville.com Tue–Sat 10am–6pm (Tue until 7pm), Sun 12–6pm reception: Tue Mar 24, 5:30–7pm; Artist talk at 6pm on view: Mar 24–Apr 26

VIRGINIA SCOTCHIE – VISUAL INVESTIGATIONSRecent work exploring the relation-ships of whole forms to that of their components concentrating on tex-ture, form and the passage of time. Curated by Julie Madden.

LORTONWORKHOUSE ARTS CENTER (WAC)9518 Workhouse Way, Lorton, VA 703.584.2911 workhousearts.org Mon–Sat 11am–6pm Sun 12–5pm reception: Sat Mar 28, 4–6pm on view: Mar 14–May 10

RE-SISTERS: WOMEN IN CLAY INVITATIONALContemporary ceramic works by women artists of Virginia. Reflect-ing themes of memory in alignment with an important historical marker onsite, the exhibit commemorates the women’s suffragists movement. Ellen Shankin, Joan Ulrich, Marlene Jack, Susie Cohen, Lori Katz, Kristen Morsches, Pam Eisenmann, Chris-ty Boltersdorf, Sarah Petty, Donna Polseno, and others. Curated by Dale Marhanka and Jaynelle Hazard.

PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED: CAPITAL ONE WEST CREEK CAMPUS EXHIBITIONSCAPITAL ONE WEST CREEK CAMPUS15075 Capital One Drive, RichmondOPEN SATURDAY MARCH 28 ONLYPre-registration required via Eventbrite: eventbrite.com/e/cap-ital-one-nceca-exhibition-pub-lic-tours-tickets-89059301769Capital One’s West Creek Campus is the setting for nine ceramics exhibitions showcasing the diversity of this art form. Exhibitions located on the campus will be open to visitors who follow pre-regis-tration requirements for events on Sat-urday, March 28.

STANDING IN THE CLOUDSThrough ceramic sculptures, Andréa Keys Connell aims to direct the visi-tor’s eyes to a range of hidden stories that reflect what cannot be expressed with words.2020 ARCHIE BRAY FOUNDATION RESIDENT ARTISTSNine resident artists from the Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts in Helena, Montana exhibit their sculptural work in ceramics. Ste-ven Young Lee, Jessica Brandl, Stu-art Gair, Iva Haas, Kelly Stevenson, Jason Bige Burnett, Katriona Drijber, Chase Travaille, and Nicholas Wed-dell. Curators: Steven Young Lee, and Maura Wright.MANIFESTJeremy Jernegan’s wall pieces explore our situation as inhabitants in a world with a rapidly changing climate.EXTENSIONKendra Dawn Wadsworth works intuitively using a variety of tradi-tional and non-traditional materi-als and tools in her sculptural and two-dimensional artwork.PAMUNKEY BLACK WARE POTTERYKnown for Pamunkey Black Ware Pottery, pit fired with wood, these traditional wares are made from local clay dug from deposits along the Pamunkey River. This exhibition con-sists of photographs and videos doc-umenting the Pamunkey Black Ware Pottery history and process. Curated by Amanda Dalla Villa Adams.

POTTERY NORTHWEST RESIDENT ARTIST EXHIBITION 2019–2020Seven resident artists from Pottery Northwest in Seattle, Washington exhibit their ceramics. Tzyy Yi-Amy Young, Liisa K. Nelson, Jake Brodsky, Hanako O’Leary, Anyuta GusakoVA. Amanda Salov, Ling Chun, Granite Calimpong, and Soe Yu New. Curated by Ling Chun.ITERATIONSEarthenware pots informed by the traditional Japanese aesthetics of wabi sabi, beauty characterized by simplicity, intimacy, and refined imperfection. Video work by the art-ist will also be on exhibit. Rebekah Wostrel.WOMEN WHO WOOD FIREThis exhibition highlights the empowering aspects of wood firing and the women Joanna Gragnani has befriended along her journey as a wood fire potter. Elena Capousis, Joanna Gragnani, Beatriz Gutierrez Gonzalez, and Zoë Powell. Curated by Joanna Gragnani.WORKHOUSE CERAMIC RESIDENT ARTISTSSix resident artists from the Work-house Arts Center in Lorton, Virgin-ia exhibit their ceramics. Kristen J. Morsches, Sarah Petty, Brian Grow, Christy A. Boltersdorf, Pam Eisen-mann, and Joan Ulrich. Curated by Dale Marhanka.

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LEW WHITE TOURS: EXHIBITIONS BY BUSBoth Timed Tours and Continuous Shuttle Routes are offered by Lew White Tours during the Conference.

Tickets can be purchased at the Tour and Shuttle Booth in the Registration Lobby of the Convention center.

TIMED TOUR ROUTESTuesday, March 24 Wednesday, March 25

• Riders board the bus at the Convention Center at the same time and stay together during the entire tour.

• At each stop there is an allotted amount of time to visit the exhibition(s).

• At the end of each visit everyone re–boards the bus and travels to the next stop.

• A box lunch is included with the Wednesday tour cost

CONTINUOUS GALLERY SHUTTLESWednesday March 25 Thursday Evening March 26 Friday Evening March 27

• Buses operate continuously; departures approximately every 10–30 minutes (depending on the shuttle route) from the Convention Center.

• Board the bus at the Convention Center at your leisure.

• Each rider receives a wristband which is the ticket to re–board the bus at any stop along the route.

• At any of the stops on the shuttle riders may hop off and visit the exhibition(s) knowing that every 10–30 minutes a bus will be available at the shuttle stop to hop on and ride to the next exhibition or return to the Convention Center.

NOTE: A separate and unique shuttle ticket is needed for each shuttle route

TUESDAY TIMED TOUR: NCECA-SPONSORED EXHIBITIONS PLUS 14 ADDITIONAL EXHIBITIONS

Tour Cost: Prior to Conference $49.00 each At Conference $55.00 each

Departs the convention center at 1pm; returns at 5:30pm

STOP 1.ALMA’S RVA224 W Brookland Park Blvd, 1st Fl., RichmondThe Color Network Presents: Constructors in Clay

HAND / THROWN STUDIO123 W Brookland Park Blvd., RichmondShift Work

STOP 2.MAIN STREET STATION1500 E Main St., RichmondTABLE+WARE 2020Transformations of the SelfVectors: The Artaxis Fellowship in its First Four Years

GALANIDES LAW OFFICES1561 E Main St., Richmond

Our Past Shapes Our Present

SHOCKOE ARTSPACE12 N 19th St., Richmond

Eternal

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY1716 E Main St., Richmond

Clay and LifeDisruption

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY STUDIOS & GALLERY1714 E Main St., Richmond

One...Out of Many

STOP 3.artspaceZero E 4th St., Richmond2020 NCECA Juried Student Exhibition

ART WORKS320 Hull St., Richmond

RVA-CLAY, The Influence of Time on a Clay CommunitySuspendedSmall Offerings

CARAVATI’S104 E 2nd St., Richmond

Monocacy River Pottery Group: A Conscious Collective

STOP 4.VISUAL ARTS CENTER OF RICHMOND1812 W Main St., RichmondThe Burdens of History, 2020 NCECA Annual exhibitionCritical Function 2

GLAVE KOCEN GALLERY1620 W Main St., RichmondThe Burdens of History, 2020 NCECA Annual Exhibition

PAGE BOND GALLERY1625 W Main St., RichmondALL FIRED UPSurface Memory: A Group Exhibition

REYNOLDS GALLERY1514 W Main St., Richmond

the landscape is not still

WEDNESDAY TIMED TOUR: RICHMOND’S PICKS

Tour Cost (Includes a box lunch): Prior to Conference $89.00 each At Conference $99.00 each

Departs the convention center at 9am; returns at 5pm

STOP 1.ALMA’S RVA224 W Brookland Park Blvd, 1st Fl., RichmondThe Color Network Presents: Constructors in Clay

HAND / THROWN STUDIO123 W Brookland Park Blvd., RichmondShift Work

STOP 2.SCOTT’S VIEW3410 W Clay St., Richmond

Retention SpacePeters Valley: Present

STOP 3.BRANCH MUSEUM OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN2501 Monument Ave., RichmondINNER LIVES; Cinerary Jars by Julian Stair & Rob BarnardCub Creek: Twenty Years Together

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STOP 4.VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS200 N Arthur Ashe Blvd., RichmondAnnabeth Rosen: Fables

VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS PAULEY CENTER215 N Sheppard St., RichmondCloudseeds

STOP 5.NORTHBANK PARTNERS3463 W Cary St., RichmondAcross the Pond and Back: Training, Making and Mentoring

STOP 6.MAYMONT ROBINS NATURE & VISITOR CENTER2201 Shields Lake Dr., RichmondThinking with Animals

STOP 7.VISUAL ARTS CENTER OF RICHMOND1812 W Main St., RichmondThe Burdens of History, 2020 NCECA Annual exhibitionCritical Function 2

GLAVE KOCEN GALLERY1620 W Main St., RichmondThe Burdens of History, 2020 NCECA Annual Exhibition

STOP 8.THE WOMAN’S CLUB AT THE BOLLING HAXALL HOUSE211 E Franklin St., RichmondThe Language of Flowers

STOP 9.RIVERFRONT PLAZA901-951 E Byrd St., RichmondA Tour of 16 Hands: 22 Years of MakingNew Ceramics in the Old Dominion: Virginia Potters

STOP 10.artspaceZero E 4th St., Richmond2020 NCECA Juried Student Exhibition

ART WORKS320 Hull St., Richmond

RVA-CLAY, The Influence of Time on a Clay CommunitySuspendedSmall Offerings

CARAVATI’S104 E 2nd St., Richmond

Monocacy River Pottery Group: A Conscious Collective

STOP 11.MAIN STREET STATION1500 E Main St., RichmondTABLE+WARE 2020Transformations of the SelfVectors: The Artaxis Fellowship in its First Four Years

GALANIDES LAW OFFICES1561 E Main St., Richmond

Our Past Shapes Our Present

SHOCKOE ARTSPACE12 N 19th St., Richmond

Eternal

SHOCKOE ARTSPACE STUDIOS1903 E Franklin St. Ste. 114, Richmond What We Hold

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY1716 E Main St., Richmond

Clay and Life Disruption

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY STUDIOS & GALLERY1714 E Main St., Richmond

One...Out of Many

WEDNESDAY TIMED TOUR: GREATER RICHMOND GALLERIES

Tour Cost: Prior to Conference $49.00 each At Conference $55.00 each

Departs convention center at 9:30am; returns at 1:20pm

STOP 1.CULTURAL ARTS CENTER AT GLEN ALLEN, GUMENICK GALLERY2880 Mountain Rd., Glen Allen The Whole is Something Else

STOP 2.CLAYWORKS SUPPLIES RICHMOND2277 Dabney Road, Richmond Virginia Woodfiring Potters

STOP 3.CROSSROADS ART CENTER2016 Staples Mill Rd., Richmond

Into That Darkness Peering

STOP 4.UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND MUSEUMS453 Westhampton Way, Richmond

Continuum: Contemporary Ceramics in Historical Context

STOP 5.MAYMONT ROBINS NATURE & VISITOR CENTER2201 Shields Lake Dr., Richmond Thinking with Animals

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WEDNESDAY TIMED TOUR: PETERSBURG GALLERIES

Tour Cost: Prior to Conference $49.00 each At Conference $55.00 each

Departs the convention center at 2pm; returns at 5:30pm

STOP 1.PETERSBURG AREA ART LEAGUE7 E Old St., Petersburg Laughing in Clay

STOP 2.APPOMATTOX TILE ART COMPANY113 W Bank St., Petersburg

American Artifacts

STOP 3.PETERSBURG PUBLIC LIBRARY201 W Washington St., Petersburg Alternate Endings 3: Contemporary Ceramic Bookends

STOP 4.CAMERON BUILDING325 Brown St., Petersburg

Finding Nature

STOP 5.30 FRANKLIN30 Franklin St., Petersburg

Bad Idea

WEDNESDAY CONTINUOUS GALLERY SHUTTLE: NEAR WEST SHUTTLE ROUTE

Buses operate approximately every 20 minutes from 10:00am to 5:00pm, departing from and returning to the Richmond Convention Center.

Shuttle Ticket Cost: Prior to Conference $37.00 each At conference $40.00 each

STOP 1.SEDIMENT GALLERY208 E Grace St., Richmond Relic Drift

STOP 2.THE WOMAN’S CLUB AT THE BOLLING HAXALL HOUSE211 E Franklin St., Richmond The Language of Flowers

STOP 3.UPTOWN GALLERY1305 W Main St., Richmond

Conscious Transitions

STOP 4.VISUAL ARTS CENTER OF RICHMOND1812 W Main St., Richmond

The Burdens of History, 2020 NCECA Annual exhibition Critical Function 2

GLAVE KOCEN GALLERY1620 W Main St., Richmond

The Burdens of History, 2020 NCECA Annual Exhibition

PAGE BOND GALLERY1625 W Main St., Richmond

ALL FIRED UP Surface Memory: A Group Exhibition

REYNOLDS GALLERY1514 W Main St., Richmond

the landscape is not still

STOP 5.THE ANDERSON AT VCUarts907 1/2 W Franklin St., Richmond

Mundane Life Impulse Interior Reminiscence | Southeast Asian Female Artists Exhibition Future Memories Who-is-sherry? Endless Street Groundwork Artifacts of Expectation

STOP 6.VCUarts QATAR HOUSE1326 W Broad St., Richmond

Arab Americanesque

STOP 7.VCUarts FINE ARTS BUILDING GALLERY1000 W Broad St, Richmond

Play it as it Lays

VCUarts RESEARCH INSTITUTE814 W Broad St.,1st Flr., Richmond Measured Space: Richmond

STOP 8.QUIRK GALLERY207 W Broad St., Richmond Form Function Memento

QUIRK HOTEL201 W Broad St., Richmond InterChange Meditations on the Cylinder

CANDELA BOOKS AND GALLERY214 W Broad St., Richmond Wild Clay Body, Object, Image

STEAMER COMPANY NO. 5200 W Marshall St, Richmond Monumental

BOJUART POP-UP EXHIBITION17 W Broad St. (The Mezzo Lofts), Richmond Ceramics Submerged

ANTENNAE8 E Broad St., Richmond In The Beginning: James Madison University Alumni Ceramic Show

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BUS TOURS & GALLERY SHUTTLES BY LEW WHITE • WEDNESDAY

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ART 180114 W Marshall St., Richmond

What I Like About Clay...

SAISON MARKET323 N Adams St., Richmond

Ecology of Loss

PARLOR SALON115 W Broad St., Richmond

Leather Hard / Bone Dry Exhibition and Graphic Novel

WEDNESDAY CONTINUOUS GALLERY SHUTTLE: NORTH, FAR WEST, AND CARY STREET ROUTE

Buses operate approximately every 24 minutes from 10:00am to 5:00pm., departing from and returning to the Richmond Convention Center.

Shuttle Ticket Cost: Prior to Conference $37.00 each At Conference $40.00 each

STOP 1.IRIDIAN GALLERY1407 Sherwood Ave., Richmond

Trans-cendent: The T is not Silent

STOP 2.SCOTT’S VIEW3410 W Clay St., Richmond

Retention Space Peters Valley: Present

STUDIO TWO THREE3300 W Clay St., Richmond

Being and Nothingness

THE HIGHPOINT3300 W Broad St., Richmond

Murmurations

STOP 3.SCIENCE MUSEUM OF VIRGINIA2500 W Broad St., Richmond Sometime: Somehow: Somewhere

STOP 4.BRANCH MUSEUM OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN2501 Monument Ave., Richmond INNER LIVES; Cinerary Jars by Julian Stair & Rob Barnard Cub Creek: Twenty Years Together

STOP 5.VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS200 N Arthur Ashe Blvd., Richmond Annabeth Rosen: Fables

VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS PAULEY CENTER215 N Sheppard St., Richmond Cloudseeds

STOP 6.NORTHBANK PARTNERS3463 W Cary St., Richmond

Across the Pond and Back: Training, Making and Mentoring

STOP 7.CHOP SUEY BOOKS2913 W Cary St., Richmond Chop Suey: Miscellaneous Leftovers

STOP 8.ROSEWOOD POTTERY STUDIO2217 W Cary St., Richmond The Functional Pot

WEDNESDAY CONTINUOUS GALLERY SHUTTLE: SOUTH AND EAST ROUTEBuses operate approximately every 25 minutes from 10:00am to 5:00pm, departing from and returning to the Richmond Convention Center.

Shuttle Ticket Cost: Prior to Conference $37.00 each At Conference $40.00 each

STOP 1.THE VALENTINE1015 E Clay St., Richmond

Women Working with Clay: Ten Years of Telling the Story

STOP 2.RIVERFRONT PLAZA901-951 E Byrd St., Richmond

A Tour of 16 Hands: 22 Years of Making New Ceramics in the Old Dominion: Virginia Potters

STOP 3.LADIFF125 S 14th St., Richmond

Echo Echo

STOP 4.artspaceZero E 4th St., Richmond

2020 NCECA Juried Student Exhibition

ART WORKS320 Hull St., Richmond

RVA-CLAY, The Influence of Time on a Clay Community Suspended Small Offerings

CARAVATI’S104 E 2nd St., Richmond

Monocacy River Pottery Group: A Conscious Collective

STOP 5.THE SILOS ARTIST COLLECTIVE2 Manchester Rd. (2nd Fl), Richmond Clay Embodied

STOP 6.THE BOATHOUSE AT ROCKETTS LANDING4708 E Old Main St., Richmond

Ut Prosim So That I May Serve

STOP 7.ICON REALTY4833 Old Main St., Richmond

crossXculture

STOP 8.ERIC SCHINDLER GALLERY2305 E Broad St., Richmond Gods and Ghosts

STOP 9.MAIN STREET STATION1500 E Main St., Richmond

TABLE+WARE 2020 Transformations of the Self Vectors: The Artaxis Fellowship in its First Four Years

GALANIDES LAW OFFICES1561 E Main St., Richmond

Our Past Shapes Our Present

RISE FOR YOUTH1705 E Main St., Richmond

Joy Ride

SHOCKOE ARTSPACE12 N 19th St., Richmond

Eternal

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(WEDS. SHUTTLE, cont’d)

SHOCKOE ARTSPACE STUDIOS1903 E Franklin St. Ste. 114, Richmond What We Hold

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY1716 E Main St., Richmond

Clay and Life Disruption

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY STUDIOS & GALLERY1714 E Main St., Richmond

One...Out of Many

THURSDAY EVENING CONTINUOUS GALLERY SHUTTLE: NCECA-SPONSORED EXHIBITIONS RECEPTION ROUTE

Buses operate approximately every 10 minutes from 5:00pm to 9:00pm, departing from and returning to the Richmond Convention Center.

Shuttle Ticket Cost: Prior to Conference $37.00 each At Conference $40.00 each

STOP 1.VISUAL ARTS CENTER OF RICHMOND1812 W Main St., Richmond

The Burdens of History, 2020 NCECA Annual exhibition Critical Function 2

GLAVE KOCEN GALLERY1620 W Main St., Richmond

The Burdens of History, 2020 NCECA Annual Exhibition

UPTOWN GALLERY1305 W Main St., Richmond

Conscious Transitions

STOP 2.artspaceZero E 4th St., Richmond 2020 NCECA Juried Student Exhibition

ART WORKS320 Hull St., Richmond

RVA-CLAY, The Influence of Time on a Clay Community Suspended Small Offerings

CARAVATI’S104 E 2nd St., Richmond

Monocacy River Pottery Group: A Conscious Collective

STOP 2a.TEKTONICS DESIGN GROUP702 E 4th St., Richmond Testing Ground

STOP 3.MAIN STREET STATION1500 E Main St., Richmond

TABLE+WARE 2020 Transformations of the Self Vectors: The Artaxis Fellowship in its First Four Years

GALANIDES LAW OFFICES1561 E Main St., Richmond

Our Past Shapes Our Present

RISE FOR YOUTH1705 E Main St., Richmond

Joy Ride

SHOCKOE ARTSPACE12 N 19th St., Richmond

Eternal

SHOCKOE ARTSPACE STUDIOS1903 E Franklin St. Ste. 114, Richmond What We Hold

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY1716 E Main St., Richmond

Clay and Life Disruption

SHOCKOE BOTTOM CLAY STUDIOS & GALLERY1714 E Main St., Richmond

One...Out of Many

RICHBRAU BREWERY5 S 20th St., Richmond

What is in between

FRIDAY EVENING CONTINUOUS GALLERY SHUTTLE: NORTH AND FAR WEST RECEPTION ROUTE

Buses operate approximately every 22 minutes from 5:00pm to 9:00pm, departing from and returning to the Richmond Convention Center.

Shuttle Ticket Cost: Prior to Conference $37.00 each At Conference $40.00 each

STOP 1.CANDELA BOOKS AND GALLERY214 W Broad St., Richmond Wild Clay Body, Object, Image

QUIRK GALLERY207 W Broad St., Richmond Form Function Memento

QUIRK HOTEL201 W Broad St., Richmond InterChange Meditations on the Cylinder

STEAMER COMPANY NO. 5200 W Marshall St, Richmond Monumental

BOJUART POP-UP EXHIBITION17 W Broad St. (The Mezzo Lofts), Richmond Ceramics Submerged

ANTENNAE8 E Broad St., Richmond In The Beginning: James Madison University Alumni Ceramic Show

ART 180114 W Marshall St., Richmond

What I Like About Clay...

SAISON MARKET323 N Adams St., Richmond

Ecology of Loss

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BUS TOURS & GALLERY SHUTTLES BY LEW WHITE • WEDNESDAY – FRIDAY

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STOP 2.IRIDIAN GALLERY1407 Sherwood Ave., Richmond

Trans-cendent: The T is not Silent

STOP 3.SCOTT’S VIEW3410 W Clay St., Richmond

Retention Space Peters Valley: Present

STUDIO TWO THREE3300 W Clay St., Richmond

Being and Nothingness

THE HIGHPOINT3300 W Broad St., Richmond

Murmurations

STOP 4.BRANCH MUSEUM OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN2501 Monument Ave., Richmond INNER LIVES; Cinerary Jars by Julian Stair & Rob Barnard Cub Creek: Twenty Years Together

STOP 5.THE ANDERSON AT VCUarts907 1/2 W Franklin St., Richmond

Mundane Life Impulse Interior Reminiscence | Southeast Asian Female Artists Exhibition Future Memories Who-is-sherry? Endless Street Groundwork Artifacts of Expectation

STOP 6.VCUarts QATAR HOUSE1326 W Broad St., Richmond

Arab Americanesque

STOP 7.VCUarts FINE ARTS BUILDING GALLERY1000 W Broad St, Richmond

Play it as it Lays

VCUarts RESEARCH INSTITUTE814 W Broad St.,1st Flr., Richmond Measured Space: Richmond

STOP 8. RETURN TO:QUIRK GALLERY

QUIRK HOTEL

CANDELA BOOKS AND GALLERY

STEAMER COMPANY NO. 5

BOJUART POP-UP EXHIBITION

ANTENNAE

ART 180

SAISON MARKET

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FINDING NATURE AT THE CAMERON BUILDING • DEIGHTON ABRAMS

NEW CERAMICS IN THE OLD DOMINION: VIRGINIA POTTERS AT RIVERFRONT PLAZA • MIKE JABBUR

A TOUR OF 16 HANDS / 22 YEARS OF MAKING AT RIVERFRONT PLAZA • ANDREA DENNISTON

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VISUAL INVESTIGATIONS AT CITY CLAY•VIRGINIA SCOTCHIE

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WOMEN WORKING WITH CLAY/ TEN YEARS OF TELLING THE STORY AT THE VALENTINE• BETH LO

FABLES AT THE VIRGINIA MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS • ANNABETH ROSEN

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TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE SELF AT MAIN STREET STATION GALLERY • ANDREA MARQUIS

PLEASE MAY I TOUCH IT? AT RVA NEST • JASON BRIGGS

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2020 INTERNATIONAL CONE BOX SHOW AT THE GREATER RICHMOND CONVENTION CENTER, RM E11B•HANNAH BRUST

VECTORS/ THE ARTAXIS FELLOWSHIP IN ITS FIRST FOUR YEARS AT MAIN STREET STATION GALLERY•RAVEN HALFMOON