rayz staff profile pic cropt

Raymond Rorke

Communications Designer

Email: raymond@theclaystudio.org

Phone: 215.925.3453 x 118

Raymond Rorke is The Clay Studio's Communications Designer, designing materials appearing in print and on-line, including exhibition catalogs, education booklets, signage for our new building, and brand materials such as Clay Studio t-shirts, aprons, buttons and bling. In addition, he is also responsible for our weekly e-newsletter, with over 17,000 subscribers.

Raymond also teaches an adult Handbuilding class at The Clay Studio.

 

"My bias has been to behold the radiant countenance of the deep in every instance of the clay. My insistence has been that we become aware, and sacrifice the self will of our habits of judging and aspiring. This kind of breathing between selfless beholding and self-full awareness tends to produce a new quality in both beholding and behavior. The eye grows free of bias wherever it looks. And the heart grows beyond its past desires. A new Being begins to form."

                                                          — Mary Caroline Richards, December 1971

                                                       * * * * * *

I first came to clay while working at a museum of archaeology and anthropology in Philadelphia. My artist friend there convinced me to take a pottery class at the local art center.

At first, I did what every clay beginner does: I made bowls and cups, teapots and flowerpots — the familiar, everyday things we grow up with. It gave me a thrilling sense of satisfaction to make objects for my own use, with my own hands. At the same time, I was surrounded at the museum by the pottery that ancient peoples had made, so I knew this was something larger than myself.

The next turning point came when I read The Unknown Craftsman by Soetsu Yanagi. Its teachings confirmed for me that it was possible and worthwhile to aspire — mindfully, and without ego — towards a life where everyday objects and actions have meaning, integrated around grace and authenticity.

But it’s one thing to aspire to a kind of life, another to actually practice it. What clay has given me over the years — as have my teachers and students — is a way forward, where daily awareness and creation can be practiced and deepened. These days at the studio I’m surrounded by clay in all its glory — from the beginner's first encounter holding a lump of clay to the master's skilled transformation of clay into a cultural touchstone — and as I myself work with clay, I am also on a journey of learning and mentoring in an ever-widening community of clay practitioners.

Without doubt today’s clay artists have become a remarkable force in the world, and we are witness to the vast variety of ways that people perceive, use, and talk about clay, from local workshops and rural villages to universities and national museums to online global marketplaces and outer space. It’s nothing short of breathtaking.

Meanwhile, some part of me always returns to that quiet, heart-stopping moment when I discovered, one day at a nearby thrift shop, one of my earliest pieces. I picked it up and turned it over and over in my hands. What had its life been like? What would its future be?

Take a Look

Recent Exhibitions
  • The Clay Studio National national biannual exhibition juried by Beth Ann Gerstein, Executive Director of the American Museum of Ceramic Art. The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA
  • Are "Friends" Electric? national exhibition juried by Aria Dean and David Hartt. Vox Populi, Philadelphia, PA
  • Ceramic Innovations international exhibition juried by Chris Gustin. Wayne Art Center, Wayne, PA
  • Small Sculpture regional exhibition juried by Leslie Kaufman. City Hall, Philadelphia, PA
  • Biomorphic national exhibition juried by Cj Jilek. American Museum of Ceramic Art, Pomona, CA
  • Sixth Annual Workhouse Clay International international exhibition juried by Jack Troy. Workhouse Arts Center, Lorton, VA
  • The Intimacy of Scale national juried and invitational exhibition juried by Chris Gustin. Carbondale Clay Center, Carbondale, CO
  • Craft Forms 2015 international exhibition of contemporary crafts juried by Ronald T. Labaco. Wayne Art Center, Wayne, PA
  • Zanesville Prize for Contemporary Ceramics international exhibition juried by Garth Johnson,  Julia Galloway, and Doug Jeck. Zanesville Museum of Art, Zanesville, OH
  • NCECA Biennial 2015 international exhibition juried by Anders Ruhwald, Linda Christianson, and Jo-Ann Conklin. David Winton Bell Gallery, Brown University, Providence, RI
Writings

“Knolling,” ruminations on the hand and thought processes in making my "Handhelds" series, which appeared in the Journal of Austrailian Ceramics and in Garth Clark's Cfile, an online journal of ceramics

Review of "Designature," a publication by Orkan Telhan, artist-designer and assistant professor of emerging design practices at Penn Design. view >

“The Potter’s Mark,” a proposal for a cross-cultural exhibition of ancient pottery drawn from the collections at the Penn Museum, emphasizing how a broader knowledge of pottery-making techniques, not simply pottery types, can deepen our understanding of ancient peoples and their lives.

Collaborations

2017 | designed and produced terra-cotta components for the "in the forest" installation with David Hartt | view >

2016 | edited "Designature," a publication by Orkan Telhan, artist-designer and assistant professor of emerging design practices at Penn Design | view >

2014 | co-curated "Pervasive Clay" exhibition with Sumi Maeshima, Matthew Courtney, and Ryan Greenheck | view >

Recent Awards
  • FIRST PLACE for Ceramic Photography, awarded by the Australian Ceramics Association (2015)

  • BEST IN SHOW for "Visions in Clay," a national exhibition juried by Garth Johnson. Stockton, CA (2014)

  • THIRD PLACE for "Clay in the Garden," an international exhibition juried by Sheila Menzies. Silver City, NM (2015)

rayz raku
liquid red red art molten
p1640363yes p1660634yes
p1880141
fivefeltperceptions
tableau suspended draped gold