I IlPenland Line I I PENLAND SCHOOL OF CRAFTS • POST OFFTCF ROX T7 • PFNII ANO t PENLAND SCHOOL OF CRAFTS • POST OFFICE BOX 37 • PENLAND • NORTH CAROLINA • 28765-0037 • SUMMER 2004 Celebrating Seventy-Five Years An installation view from the exhibition at the Mint Museum + Design. It s been a long time coming. Seventy-five years, if you count from the beginning. Five years if you start with the first conversa tions about how to mark the seventy-fifth anniversary of Penland School of Crafts. On an obvious level, a major round-number anniversary presented an excellent oppor tunity to attract attention to Penland s his tory and its contributions to American craft and the lives of thousands of individuals. On another level, however, this event was an opportunity to focus attention, resources, and thinking in a way that might bring something new to craft: an anniversary gift from the school. Out of these conversations came two primary projects and two partner institu tions. A major museum exhibition was developed in conjunction with the Mint Museum of Craft + Design in Charlotte, NC. An accompanying book was published with Lark Books of Asheville, NC. Both projects were shaped so they would illumi nate the Penland story while also giving the viewer or reader a new take on craft. The exhibition, titled The Nature of Craft and the Penland Experience, is on view at the Mint Museum of Craft + Design until January 30, 2005^. It includes 136 objects which span the school’s entire history (with the bulk of the work dating from 1964 to the present) and the incredible range of materials, styles, and approaches that col lectively constitute Penland’s definition of craft. All of the work is by artists who have been instructors or resident artists at Penland, but curators Ellen Denker and Dana Moore did not want to assemble Penland’s Greatest Hits or a history told through objects. Instead, the exhibition is orga nized around the themes of Skill, Source, Expression, and Community. Although most of the objects could logically have been placed in more than one of the categories, these themes created a structure which juxtaposes the work in surprising ways, as they cut across divisions of time, period, style, and media. The idea is for these potent objects, filled with informa tion, gesture, and intent, to engage with each other in new ways, giving the viewer an expanded idea of craft along with a rich experience of both the continuity and diver sity of its practice. The exhibition is accompanied by an extensive website developed by the muse um’s staff and Interactive Knowledge of Charlotte. This is a website unlike any Penland has had before. It includes an illus trated history of the school, photos of the work from the exhibition (including a spe cial zoom function that lets you see the details), streaming video clips, and an online reunion page where Penland students and instructors can post information. Everyone who has been part of the school is encouraged to participate in the reunion section to share memories of Penland’s his tory and information about their work. The site, which works best with a broadband connection, is found at www.mintmuse- um.org/penland. Another component of the exhibition is a compilation of video interviews with Penland instructors which is continuously available at the museum. This thought-pro voking piece was edited by Dana Moore from interviews conducted by Joe Murphy, Tom Spleth, Robin Dreyer, and others. The book, also titled The Nature of Craft and the Penland Experience was published in July and is available now from the Penland Gallery, online booksellers, and through book stores nationwide (any bookstore can The book was introduced at a book release party at Blue Spiral 1 Gallery in Asheville. Gallery owner John Cram arranged for an exhibition of Penland artists to coincide with the party. The history of Penland School was also celebrated in a memorable exhibition at the Corn design by Kristi yejfer The Nature OF Craft ANU THE Penland Experience order it). It is 228 pages long and contains images of all of the work in the exhibition and 143 additional illustrations. Ten original essays were commissioned for the book. The first is a short history of Penland by staff member Robin Dreyer. It is followed by an essay on craft history by exhibition co-cura tor Ellen Denker. The other eight essays approach craft, edu cation, creativity, and the Penland experience from vari ous points of view. The essayists are not craft experts; rather, they are inter esting thinkers from a variety of fields who were invited to spend time at Penland and then to write an essay on any aspect of craft that interested them. The essayists are sociologist Galen Cranz, interdisciplinary scholar Ellen Dissanayake, poet and Nobel Laureate chemist Roald Hoffman, cultural com mentator and MacArthur -r, r r« i ; r « I hefront cover (f the book. I he cover image is David Ramseys Fellow Lewis Hyde, cultural photograph tf a large iron gate created by instructors Japheth anthropologist Norris Brock Howard and Alice James along with the students in their fall, Johnson, folklorist Michael 2000 iron class. Owen Jones, poet Eileen Myles, and art critic Patricia Phillips. The content of their writings is as varied and diverse as the content of the exhibition. In addition to presenting the first detailed history of the school since Lucy Morgan wrote her mem oirs in i93’8 and cataloging an extraordi nary selection of objects, the content of this book makes a real contribution to contem porary writing and thinking on the subject of craft. In process here is a commemorative glass murrine created by a class taught by Dinah Hulet, Richard Ritter, and Jan Williams, jfter it was stretched and cut, the brightly colored murrine slices were about two inches in diameter. Penland Gallery, titled Penland Retrospect, which ran from March 2 to April i^. Curated by archivist Michelle Francis and exhibitions manager Kathryn Gremley, the show included objects owned by the school and some loaned by friends, neighbors, and the families of Lucy Morgan and Bill Brown, Penland’s first two directors. It was exciting to see promotional materials for the Penland Weavers and Potters next to examples of their work—to find craft work made in honor of Penland’s fiftieth anniver sary sitting in front of photographs from that celebration. The response to this exhi bition was so strong that it was hard to take it down when the time came. Penland is also organizing a special exhi bition and a panel discussion on craft educ tion for the SOFA Chicago exposition in November (see page 8). Potter and Penland trustee Nicholas Joerling wrote an essay about summer workshops which will appear in the SOFA catalog. The first event of the year was a special work session for Penland instructors. For a week in late February, ninety-seven artists were given the run of the place. Some {Continued on page 3