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Craft Today: The Poetry of the Physical
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12167 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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2 / 1987 |
2,071 Words |
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Karen S. Chambers Karen S. Chambers is a craft writer, critic, and curator
currently based in New York. |
Craft Today: The Poetry of the Physical at the American Craft Museum in New York is a blockbuster exhibition in every sense of the word. It is mammoth: more than 300 objects by 286 craftsmakers and artists from thirty-six states. It features the best work of the leading crafts practitioners: Mac-Arthur Award winner Sam Maloof in wood; American studio glass movement founder Harvey Littleton; the grand old man of clay, Pete Voulkos; and the grand old ladies of fiber, Lenore Tawny and Claire Zeisler; the country's best known blacksmith, Albert Paley, to name just a few of the established craftspeople. Emerging craftspeople were not overlooked either with hot young talents like Michael Lucero in clay, Amy Roberts in glass, furniture maker Thomas Loeser, and many other younger artists. It showcases precious materials: Gold and silver are always crowd pleasers. In October on the gala opening nights for the new museum building, so many people lined up outside the exhibition that passersby were unable to resist looking through the clear glass of the façade. No one can refuse an invitation to a birthday party like Craft Today: The Poetry of the Physical, which celebrates the thirtieth anniversary of the American Craft Museum, founded by the American Craft Council, to present work by contemporary American craftspeople.
Nationwide Impact
Craft Today is the first major survey of the American craft scene since the 1969 Objects/USA (The Johnson Collection of Contemporary Crafts), and its impact will be felt across the country when it travels to six other sites over the next two years. Paul Smith, director of the museum since 1963 and organizer of Craft Today, believes it "is significant in showing the skill, imagination, and vitality
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