Pottery Studio Etiquette
#1
Posted 17 May 2011 - 11:54 AM
#1 Do not touch anyone else's work unless you have permission (This seems to be a big one that we have a problem with)
#2 Clean up after yourself. Leave your space cleaner than when you arrived.
#3 If you borrow someone else's tools, templates, etc. put them back where you borrowed them from.
#4 Watch your elbows, arms, bats, boards, etc. when placing items on the shelf. Please be aware of the other masterpieces on the shelf.
Anyone have any more etiquette rules I can add for an open studio? Thanks for any info!
#2
Posted 17 May 2011 - 01:01 PM
www.DinahSnipesSteveni.com
#3
Posted 18 May 2011 - 09:39 AM
2. Thou shalt not pick up greenware by the lip, handle or other fragile area.
3. Thou shalt not touch projects that do not belong to thee.
4. Thou shalt put all supplies back WHERE THEY BELONG AND CLEAN THE AREA (Refer to Rule #1) before departing.
5. Thou shalt let stain dry thoroughly before glazing.
7. Thou shalt CARVE THY INITIALS OR MARK in the bottom of thy projects.
8. Thou shalt place glazed ware in kiln room on the proper shelf.
9. Thou shalt believe thy teacher that the silly pink glaze or stain on thy pot will fire blue.
10. Thou shalt trust thy teacher.
#4
Posted 18 May 2011 - 09:45 AM
Contemporary Fine Colored Porcelain
www.ccpottery.com
"My Artwork would not exist without a thriving global pottery community.
In the isolation of a studio, an artist can begin to feel like an island, but in truth
we are all part of archipelagoes; chains of islands loosely connected by a stream
of information that enhances our Artwork.”
#5
Posted 18 May 2011 - 10:04 AM
Having worked in a few group settings, it really matters that the person in charge sets a good example! If the person in charge is respectful, hard-working, and disciplined, then everyone else will try hard to match that. If the person in charge is lazy, sloppy, and disrespectful of others, everyone will conclude that this is ok.
In the community center where I teach classes, our studio guidelines are 6 pages long, and every word of it matters. We also have a studio manager who is amazing, we try hard to be worthy!
Just one suggestion for your etiquette list: No eating in the studio.
Mea
#6
Posted 19 May 2011 - 03:10 PM
GEP, on 18 May 2011 - 10:04 AM, said:
Having worked in a few group settings, it really matters that the person in charge sets a good example! If the person in charge is respectful, hard-working, and disciplined, then everyone else will try hard to match that. If the person in charge is lazy, sloppy, and disrespectful of others, everyone will conclude that this is ok.
In the community center where I teach classes, our studio guidelines are 6 pages long, and every word of it matters. We also have a studio manager who is amazing, we try hard to be worthy!
Just one suggestion for your etiquette list: No eating in the studio.
Mea
#7
Posted 19 May 2011 - 03:19 PM
The best method we have found in the group studio where I work is a chart of all studio clean up jobs that rotates each month. Everyone has a job to do on that chart, once a week. That way if an area is a mess, you know who to fuss at. Repeated efforts to get adults to clean up after themselves have failed, but the boss isn't a hard a$ so people may just ignore all polite requests.
#8
Posted 20 May 2011 - 01:12 PM
#9
Posted 21 May 2011 - 08:16 AM
Another 'etiquette rule'.....apply soap to brush before dipping in wax resist, then wash out well when finished. And, again, make sure there is soap handy to be able to do it. For the most part, students are more than willing to keep the studio clean ..... well, as clean as a pottery studio can be
Mossy Rock Creations
High Point, NC
#10
Posted 21 May 2011 - 09:18 AM
GEP, on 18 May 2011 - 10:04 AM, said:
Mea
Amen to this one! Mess aside, you never know what particles you could be ingesting. That may sound like the Disney elephant-child afraid of germs (except with me, chemicals!), but you can't be too safe.
#11
Posted 21 May 2011 - 08:04 PM
Post the rules around the studio in areas that apply. Correct the students if you see a rule being broken tell them the correct way to do it. Also set the example and let the students see you follow the rules.
#12
Posted 22 May 2011 - 07:10 PM
#14
Posted 25 May 2011 - 09:29 PM
ksasser, on 25 May 2011 - 02:07 PM, said:
The students should be taught how to clean at the end of each class, so they will have the skills to clean up after their free time. Idaho Potter and Lucille Oka comments reminded me of a grad student teacher I had that taught cleaning like a drill sargent. Several years later I stopped by the school and found the studio a clay covered mess with a over flowing sink, no one was teaching care, cleaning or maintenance. I suddenly felt grateful to my drill sargent teacher. Denice (Wichita, KS)
#15
Posted 27 May 2011 - 02:18 PM
Denice, on 25 May 2011 - 06:29 PM, said:
ksasser, on 25 May 2011 - 02:07 PM, said:
The students should be taught how to clean at the end of each class, so they will have the skills to clean up after their free time. Idaho Potter and Lucille Oka comments reminded me of a grad student teacher I had that taught cleaning like a drill sargent. Several years later I stopped by the school and found the studio a clay covered mess with a over flowing sink, no one was teaching care, cleaning or maintenance. I suddenly felt grateful to my drill sargent teacher. Denice (Wichita, KS)
'Drill sergeant'? I like the sound of that. Yes it is how I run all of my classes from ‘K’ to Senior citizen and oddly enough one senior called me that once, but she cleaned up her space and made sure others did the same. Got stripes???
#17
Posted 29 December 2011 - 09:47 PM
Lori, on 18 May 2011 - 08:39 AM, said:
2. Thou shalt not pick up greenware by the lip, handle or other fragile area.
3. Thou shalt not touch projects that do not belong to thee.
4. Thou shalt put all supplies back WHERE THEY BELONG AND CLEAN THE AREA (Refer to Rule #1) before departing.
5. Thou shalt let stain dry thoroughly before glazing.
7. Thou shalt CARVE THY INITIALS OR MARK in the bottom of thy projects.
8. Thou shalt place glazed ware in kiln room on the proper shelf.
9. Thou shalt believe thy teacher that the silly pink glaze or stain on thy pot will fire blue.
10. Thou shalt trust thy teacher.
I love it except it should be titled Pottery students. Potters don't have to obey teachers. Students do.
Marcia
#18
Posted 29 December 2011 - 10:16 PM
Lori, on 18 May 2011 - 09:39 AM, said:
2. Thou shalt not pick up greenware by the lip, handle or other fragile area.
3. Thou shalt not touch projects that do not belong to thee.
4. Thou shalt put all supplies back WHERE THEY BELONG AND CLEAN THE AREA (Refer to Rule #1) before departing.
5. Thou shalt let stain dry thoroughly before glazing.
7. Thou shalt CARVE THY INITIALS OR MARK in the bottom of thy projects.
8. Thou shalt place glazed ware in kiln room on the proper shelf.
9. Thou shalt believe thy teacher that the silly pink glaze or stain on thy pot will fire blue.
10. Thou shalt trust thy teacher.
For years I used the attachment for all of my studio classes-it was placed on the back of the syllabus. This was a generic set of rules for my Art studio, Animation studio and Ceramics studio so many of the terms are "generic" some of the rules may not make complete sense for Ceramics, but worked well when explained in the opening lectures.
Attached File(s)
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Conduct and manners.doc (22.5K)
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