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Ceramic artist Lindsay Scypta hosted an interactive throwing and decorating webinar! Here’s the recording for those of you who missed it! If you don't subscribe to CLAYflicks, you can check out an excerpt to the left. CLAYflicks subscribers can log in to watch whole 2 hours! Enjoy!

Click here to view a PDF of helpful links and resources!

The Workshop from Home webinar series was started to provide access to high-quality online workshops for those who are unable to attend in person. Recordings of the webinars will be archived on CLAYflicks for those who may have missed the live event. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram to learn more about upcoming webinars in the Workshop From Home series.

Total runtime: 2 hours

About the Author

Lindsay Scypta

As an artist, potter and designer I am deeply interested in textile pattern, Victorian etiquette, architectural tracery, and the history of the table. I began my ceramics investigation in high school and continued into college, completing a BFA in Art & Design from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University. For two remarkable summers I immersed myself in the artist community at Anderson Ranch Art Center as a summer intern, filling my ceramic toolbox with techniques and tools. Finally after two years as an artist-in-residence at Ashland University, I arrived at The Ohio State University where I completed my MFA in ceramic art. I was blessed with the opportunity to follow my thesis research to England, where I visited the Wedgwood Museum, the Victoria & Albert Museum and the Brighton Palace. Some influences over the past years have been the softness of tufted Victorian sitting room chairs, and the architectural motifs and quatrefoils of European Gothic cathedrals. Following graduate school I spent one year as an Artist-in-Resident at Clay Art Center in Port Chester, New York. Currently I am an adjunct ceramics professor at Owens Community College in Perrysburg, Ohio and Bowling Green State University. Working strictly with porcelain clay, the work is thrown, trimmed, altered and decorated, then fired to cone six in an electric oxidation atmosphere. I am still continuing to push my ideas and am excited to incorporate new research into my studio practice! 

See Lindsay's ICAN Artist Portfolio page here!

Unfamiliar with any terms in this video? Browse our glossary of pottery terms!
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