Archive for Kathryn Osgood

Enamels: Exploring Texture, Color and Form-a workshop with Kathryn Osgood

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This 3-day workshop is about textured surfaces and three dimensional form in enameling. Texture is built through experimentation including sugar-firing, overfiring and firing on to an enameled surface with non-traditional material such as cubic zirconia, sand, reflective glass beads, frit, and glass microbeads. We will move beyond the traditional glossy enamel surfaces to create intriguing tactility.

To explore the use of vitreous enamels on dimensional surfaces the metal forming will involve fold forming, shell forming, die forming, and corrugating. We will create color through layered opaques and transparents, liquid enamels, silver foil, graphite, and enamel paints. Solutions for setting enameled pieces will be discussed.

All levels welcome.

Kathryn Osgood is associate professor at College of The Abermarle in Manteo, NC. She received her MFA from East Carolina University. She has exhibited nationally and internationally and her work is featured in several publications: The Art of Enameling, Contemporary Enameling: Art and Technique, 500 Earrings, 500 Enameled Objects,  and Metalsmith magazine.

 

 

Workshop Hours:

Friday – Sunday, 10 AM to 5 PM , with meal breaks

Cost: $425 plus $30 materials fee

Materials List: Provided upon registration or when ready

Registration: Limited to 12

Refund Policy: No refunds unless your workshop position can be filled by another person.

Lodging, Meals, Transportation:

Coming from out of town? Check AirBnB, Priceline, and other discounted online lodging sources, The Center will try help you make your stay comfortable and stress free while you are a workshop participant.

Our workshops are back for another terrific year! REGISTER NOW

Registration is now open for our 2018 workshop season–join us! Master traditional skills or push the limits of new ones in friendly, small-group classes taught by top educators and artists. Choose from our Radical Enameling series or our NEW Masters Series!

In addition, many of our instructors give a free public presentation on their work in conjunction with the workshop. Join our mailing list on our home page to be sure you never miss one, and follow us on Instagram: @centerforenamelart.

Tonight, Thursday May 17th, Kathryn Osgood speaks at the Crucible! Information below. 

Radical Enameling

Our Radical Enameling workshops are taught by some of the most innovative artists working today, using unorthodox methods and materials to challenge enamel’s technical and aesthetic limits.

Kathryn Osgood  THIS WEEKEND!

Enamels: Exploring Texture, Color and Form May 18-20, The Crucible, Oakland, CA

Free public presentation TONIGHT! Thursday, May 17th, 6:30PM at the Crucible, second floor performance space.

Alicia Jane Boswell  

Between the Precious Glass Folds: Etch, Score, Fold, Stitch, Enamel…Repeat! June 8-10, The Richmond Art Center, Richmond, CA

Jennifer Wells  

Enamels On and Off the Body September 19-21, The Crucible, Oakland, CA

Masters Series

Founded to honor leading enamelists at the pinnacle of their artistic development, our Masters Series classes feature classic enameling techniques taught by those who have spent a lifetime mastering them.

Ruth Ball –  Contemporary Enameling On Silver March 23-25 and March 26-28, Silvera’s Jewelry School, Berkeley, CA

John KillmasterExperimental Large Scale Enameling on Steel July 13-16, the Center’s new space at KVO Industries, Santa Rosa, CA

Harlan Butt –  New Approaches to Cutting Precious Metal Foil Shapes and Enamel Layering Over Foil, October  15-17, The Crucible, Oakland, CA

Martha BanyasExplorations & Rendering: Drawing and Painting with Enamel Dec. 7-9, Richmond Art Center, Richmond, CA

 

See the whole list here: REGISTER NOW!

See you at the workshops!

Surface, Color, Form: We Talk With Kathryn Osgood About Her Boundary-Pushing Work

Brooch, Kathryn Osgood

Kathryn Osgood worked as an engineer for a small, family-owned telephone company in rural Maine for almost 20 years before starting a second life as an artist, jeweler, and enamelist. After studying with Linda Darty and Bob Ebendorf at East Carolina University, she moved to the Outer Banks of North Carolina, where she heads the Professional Crafts Jewelry Program at College of The Albemarle in Manteo

Osgood’s work pushes the boundaries of enameling, using fold-forming, varied surfaces, and non-traditional materials to create tactile, sculptural pieces. Osgood will share her expertise in her upcoming workshop, Enamels: Exploring Texture, Color and Form. The workshop runs from May 18 – May 20, 2018, at the Crucible in Oakland, CA.

There are still slots available in this workshop–register now!

 

What drew you to enamel as your preferred medium?

I have always loved color. It elicits an emotional response from the viewer; it can be calming, sensual, exciting, joyful. Before I became a jeweler and enamellist, I was working as a textile artist, doing surface design, painting and dyeing fabric and creating wall hangings and quilts. When I took my first metals class, I was hooked. I loved working with metal; how it allowed me to create dimensional work. It could be hammered, shaped, and formed.  I fell in love with the material, but I really missed the element of color.

When I discovered enamel, I found a way to bring color back into my work. Layering opaque and transparent enamels allows me explore an almost unlimited rich color palette.

Ocean Brooch, Kathryn Osgood

How did you become intrigued with textured dimensional surfaces?

When I began working with metal and was fabricating jewelry from sheet metal, I was not satisfied with the idea of decorating a flat surface.  I wanted to create pieces that were more sculptural, to take advantage of the plasticity of metal, of its ability to be formed into organic shapes.  I began exploring the natural forms around me: magnolia pods, pine cones, leaves.  I was intrigued by the textures found in nature and I wanted to replicate them, creating pieces that were more organic.

I enjoy exploring ways to from metal by hammering, dapping, bending, fold forming, shell forming, and die forming.  I like my pieces to have a tactile quality, to invite the viewer to touch.  I want them to feel good, to entice with both texture and color.

Who have been your mentors?

There are so many talented enamelists whose work inspires me, so it is hard to just name a few.

I was lucky enough to study at East Carolina University with Linda Darty and Bob Ebendorf.  Linda Darty introduced me to enameling and the world of color on metal. Linda is a master enamellist and she generously shared her extensive knowledge of enameling and was a supportive and encouraging teacher. Linda continues to impress me with her beautiful work and with her love for the art of enameling. Bob Ebendorf is also a mentor and generous teacher. His knowledge of metalsmithing and his adventurous creative spirit continue to inspire me in living a creative life.

Osgood on the North Carolina coast

What inspires your work?

I live on Roanoke Island, off the coast of North Carolina. Since moving to the Outer Banks area, my work has changed to reflect my environment. The colors and textures of the sand and the water that surround my coastal home inform my work. In the early mornings, I often walk on the beach with my dog, Lola, picking up pieces of shells and driftwood that have washed in with the tide.  My pieces are based on marine plant and animal forms, their textures and colors informed by the shell fragments that I have collected.

 Find more of Osgood’s work on her website.