Friday,
19 January

Opening @ Arthshila Delhi

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5.00 pm - 6.00 pm
Welcome
 


6.00 pm onwards
Chai by SMOGWARE-LABAIR AND CASCOLAND


7.00 pm – 7.30 pm
Play with me performance
by ROY MAAYAN AND EREZ MAAYAN 


7.45 pm –  8.15 pm
Sequenced Ceramics performance
by COPPER SOUNDS


Saturday,
20 January

Opening weekend @ Arthshila Delhi 

11.00 am – 12.30 pm
Reflections on Transcorpeal Feminism participatory performance
by LOLA BEN-ALON, PENMAI CHONGTOUA & SASHA FISHMAN


2.15 pm – 2.45 pm

By Heart performance
by KUSHALA VORA


3.00 pm – 3.40 pm

Decoding Ceramics – the digital transmission of tacit knowledge and expertise
by ANTHONY QUINN


3.40 pm – 4.20 pm

Wedge, the Australian Ceramics Triennale 2025
by BERNARD KERR


4.20 pm – 5.00 pm

Contemporary Korean Ceramics: Re-interpretation of its Heritage and Advancement into the 21st Century
by HYEYOUNG CHO


5.00 pm – 5.30 pm

Q&A with KANIKA ANAND


Sunday,
21 January

Opening weekend @ Arthshila Delhi

11.00 am – 11.45 am
Kumbhar Ki Niyani story telling
by SHAMPA SHAH


11.45 am – 12.45 pm
Maker’s Film Festival: 12 short films from 5 countries especially curated for the Indian Ceramics Triennale by MAKER & SMITH


12.45 pm – 2.15 pm
Smogware Conversation
by LAB AIR AND CASCOLAND


3.00 pm – 4.30 pm 
The Lotus and the Swan
film by NIRMAL CHANDER produced by Delhi Blue Pottery Trust. Followed by a conversation with RACHANA PARASHER


5.00 pm – 6.00 pm
 
Launch of MRIN - A Journal Of Indian Ceramic Art, Issue -3

 
 

 
 
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Exhibition Walkthroughs


Thursday, 01 to Sunday, 04 February

@ Arthshila Delhi

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Join the curators as they walk you through Common Ground, talking about the work on display, the artists and the process of building the exhibition.

Numbers Limited and registration is offered on a first-come, first-served basis.

 
 
 

 
 
 
 
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The central theme of Common Ground 2024, the second edition of the Indian Ceramics Triennale, is diversity and commonality and how they complement and intersect with each other. The lines between genre, disciplines and people are blurred, realities are not black or white and everything is a matter of context. This is expressed in a multitude of ways in the work of the artists we are showcasing at the Triennale. From dialogues between differing mediums and practices, to polarities that reflect each other and investigations of the nuances of custom, we are looking at the voices that trace the threads of convergence.

 
 

Programme


Monday,
22 January

@ Sanskriti Kendra

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10.00 am – 11.00 am
Registration and Chai

SESSION I

11.00 am – 1.15 pm
Making and Collecting

Perspectives on contemporary clay practices and collecting in India and internationally.

11.00 am – 11.15 am
Introduction
by KANIKA ANAND

11.15 am – 11.45 am
The Depth and Breadth of World Ceramics
by ELAINE HENRY

11.45 am– 12.15 pm
What Clay Can Do
by NEHA KUDCHADKAR

12.15 pm – 12.30 pm
Q&A | ELAINE HENRY and NEHA KUDCHADKAR with ABHAY SARDESAI

12.30 pm – 1.15 pm
Patrons and Collectors: Contemporary Indian Ceramics
ABHAY SARDESAI in conversation with DR PHEROZA GODREJ & DR RAJ KUBBA


SESSION II

2.30 pm – 4.30 pm
Art & Community
Art and creativity can mitigate the traditional roles that people play within their communities, empowering minorities and giving voice to the unheard.


2.30 pm – 3.00 pm

Hermannsburg Potters: HAYLEY COULTHARD & RONA RUBUNTJA


3.00 pm – 3.30 pm

Clay, Crafts & Community
by VANMALA JAIN


3.30 pm – 4.00 pm

Re-Imagining Craft Futures, The Design Way
by NEELIMA HASIJA


4.00 pm – 4.30 pm

Q&A with DR KRISTINE MICHAEL


Tuesday,
23 January

@ Sanskriti Kendra

10.00 am – 11.00 am
Registration and Chai


SESSION I

11.00 am – 1.00 pm
Process & Methodology
Ceramic art practices that blur the boundaries between the traditional, hand crafted and mechanical means of creation.


11.00 am – 11.30 am

Creating More and Better With Less
by SHASHANK NIMKAR


11.30 am – 12.00 pm
Making Bithooras
by ANDREW BURTON


12.00 pm – 12.30 pm
In a world of Artificial Intelligence, are there still reasons to make ceramics by hand?
by DAVID JONES


12.30 pm – 1.00 pm 
Q&A with MADHVI SUBRAHMANIAN


SESSION II

2.00 pm – 5.00 pm
Artist Demonstrations

Concurrent Sessions


  • SUSAN BEINER

  • DARIEN JOHNSON

  • HERMANNSBURG POTTERS: HAYLEY PANANGKA COULTHARD, RONA PANANGKA RUBUNTJA & ANDREA PUNGARTA RONTJI

  • LOTA ISMAILBHAI HUSEN, KUMBHAR ALIMAMAD DHAVAD, SANTOSH & RAKHI WAREKAR

 
 
 


 
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Workshops


Wednesday,
24 January

@ Sanskriti Kendra

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Elaine Henry is an well known writer who has contributed tremendously to scholarship related to ceramic art practice. She is a former Editor and Publisher of Ceramics: Art & Perception.

In this workshop, she will discuss the objective and subjective qualities commonly used in writing what might be considered a "review". You will analyze currently published reviews for these qualities and discuss the objective qualities of writing a review and demonstrate how subjective analyses follow, to give the writer the opportunity for personal assessment.

To prepare for the workshop please read a review or two in a newspaper or magazine, find a work of art that moves you, and write about it as if you were reviewing it. If possible, keep it to one page. Bring your review to the workshop.

Individual one-on-one meetings can be scheduled for the afternoon following our morning together as a group.

Numbers are limited and registration is offered on a first-come, first-served basis.

Fees: Rs 5500

Cost is inclusive of a delicious hot vegetarian lunch.

Tea will be served from 10.30 am

 

Elaine Henry is former Editor/Publisher of Ceramics: Art & Perception. She taught at Emporia State University in Kansas, acting as Department Chair from 2000-2007. She was President of NCECA 2002-2004 and is now a Fellow and Honorary Member of that organization. She is a past president and lifetime member of the International Ceramics Magazine Editors Association. Published, exhibited and collected worldwide, she is a Council member of the International Academy of Ceramics. In 2020, she earned an MA in English at the University of Wyoming, focusing on critical writing


 

Dr Wendy Gers is an award-winning curator and scholar, who has worked with and mentored artists from across the globe.

A portfolio review can be a valuable learning experience and opportunity for professional growth. Portfolio reviews are especially helpful if you are stuck in a rut and want a fresh eye, or a conversation about your work. Maybe you want to submit your work to a contest, apply for a grant application, or get your work published or exhibited.

You will have five minutes to present five images of five works, an artist statement and biodata. You will receive ten minutes of individual and peer-feedback and tailored advice in a group setting.

Numbers are limited and registration is offered on a first-come, first-served basis.

Fees: Rs 5500

Tea will be served from 10.30 am

 

Dr Wendy Gers has lived and worked in Europe, the UK, Southern Africa, East, Central and South Asia and the USA. She is Curator of Modern and Contemporary Ceramics at Princessehof National Museum of Ceramics in the Netherlands. She also is a Visiting Professor at the University of Sunderland, UK.

Wendy has authored numerous catalogues, book chapters and scholarly articles, including the landmark monograph on Southern African ceramics, Scorched Earth (2016). She has delivered over 80 public lectures and keynote addresses in nearly 30 countries, and has served on various boards.

 
 

 
 
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