Kids Class: Collaborative Clay Bells – Saturday, November 30th, 10:00am – 1:00pm
$135.00
Saturday, November 30th, 2024 10:00am - 1:00pm
This workshop was inspired by a collaborative piece made by instructor Amy Henson and her daughter. Let your child’s imagination run free with a tiny sculpture, as the accompanying parent follows a demonstration on pinching a bell and clapper to attach to your child’s creation. A human figure bell will be demonstrated. The finished bells will be glazed and joined together before they are ready for pickup and no prior clay experience is needed to join in. Please wear clothes you don’t mind getting dirty.
This is an adult and child activity. 1 ticket purchased is for both the adult and the child together.
4 in stock
Kids Class: Collaborative Clay Bells – Saturday, November 30th, 10:00am – 1:00pm
$135.00
Saturday, November 30th, 2024 10:00am - 1:00pm
This workshop was inspired by a collaborative piece made by instructor Amy Henson and her daughter. Let your child’s imagination run free with a tiny sculpture, as the accompanying parent follows a demonstration on pinching a bell and clapper to attach to your child’s creation. A human figure bell will be demonstrated. The finished bells will be glazed and joined together before they are ready for pickup and no prior clay experience is needed to join in. Please wear clothes you don’t mind getting dirty.
This is an adult and child activity. 1 ticket purchased is for both the adult and the child together.
4 in stock
Instructor Bio
Amy Henson
Amy Henson is a ceramic artist and educator living in Garland. Amy has been wheel throwing and hand building clay objects for 18 years, and exhibits her work locally and nationally. Amy earned her BFA in Studio Art from Southern Methodist University in 2007, and her MFA in Ceramics from University of North Texas in 2022. She has been teaching in ceramics since 2021 at UNT, first as a graduate student and now as adjunct faculty, and since 2022 at the Brookhaven campus of Dallas College. Amy has also taught various workshops in the D/FW area. Her current work focuses on maternal feminism and animal forms translated into hand-built sculptural vessels. Amy enjoys working with beginners and established makers alike. She demonstrates a diverse array of methods to encourage experimentation, and supports students’ ideas and hands-on execution to build their confidence and skill.”