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Hot Night At The Worcester Center for Crafts

Raku Fire at the Worcester Center for Arts and Crafts

The fiery processes of craft will be on display at the Worcester Center for Crafts’ free block-party style event, HOT NIGHT IN THE CITY on Friday, July 21 from 6-9pm. Many of the demonstrations and events will take place outside to accommodate visitors, and for dramatic effect!

During the July 21 Hot Night, the Craft Center can guarantee that where there is smoke, there will be fire since fire and heat are essential elements to working with glass, clay and metal—three of the materials that will be demonstrated at Hot Night.

Dusk’s darkness will give way to the warm glow of artists’ illuminating demonstrations of the ancient arts of glassblowing, raku firing, flame working, and blacksmithing. In addition, the Center will offer Wheel Throwing Under the Stars, music, food, art and drink.

Wheel Throwing Under the Stars will feature short introductory hands-on experiences with centering clay, and members of the public will be able to try their hands at throwing pots. A portable glass furnace will be set up in the parking lot to demonstrate the glassblowing that goes on daily at the Worcester Center for Crafts’ New Street Glass Studio. Blacksmiths will forge metals, and the Raku artist Ginny Gillen and her class will do a pottery raku firing. The raku artists are keeping secret what exactly will be coming out of the raku fire on Hot Night—so be there to uncover the mystery!

Jubilee Gardens, a popular band from the area who play an all original, eclectic mix of music with hints of world, pop, folk, and rock will provide the music for dancing, eating, and celebrating craft and the Worcester Center for Craft in the community.

“Hot Night gives us the opportunity to literally turn ourselves inside out in order to tell the community THANK YOU for being partners with us,” said Honee Hess, executive director of the Crafts Center. “We have these ‘hot’ activities going on every day, but on HOT NIGHT we bring them out into the open for all to see and enjoy.” Activities at HOT NIGHT are free to the public, although donations are accepted.

The public is invited inside the Craft Center building to participate in several maker activities in the studios, including a collaborative ceramic hand-building experience and an opportunity to preview fall’s class line-up. HOT NIGHT IN THE CITY occurs rain or shine. Also opening that night in the Center’s renowned Krikorian Gallery is an exhibit spark, curated by local painter Michelle May.

Fueling the crowd will be the award-winning bbq purveyor, B.T.’s Smokehouse of Sturbridge and pizza maker extraordinaire, Anzio’s Brick Oven Pizza: both culinary masters bring their wood-fired equipment on the Craft Center’s premises to produce fresh BBQ and wood-fired pizza!

For dessert, Worcester State University alum, Renee King who is relocating her business to the Canal District in Worcester, brings the Queen’s Cups’ award-winning cupcakes to the event. New this year, Fretzels will round out the sweetness of evening with their real frozen yogurt, pretzels and more. To top things off for the over-21 crowd, Austin Liquors has arranged a tasting of Worcester’s newest brewery product, Flying Dreams Brewery beer. Food prices are set by vendors.

Spärk, an exhibit opening on Hot Night and running through September 16 will feature the work of four women artists: Jessica Lyn Burhans, Tara Sellios, Keri Anderson and Michelle May. The title of the exhibit speaks to the art on view as a fiery particle thrown off from a fire or emitting sparks of fire or electricity. Provocative? Edgy? “The show is perfect for HOT NIGHT,” says Gallery Director Candace Casey, “as it speaks to the energy of the work being shown, and the spark of creativity that it inspires!”

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Culinary Imaginings Depicts the Art of Cooking

Donna Dufault's Pans on display at Culinary Imaginings.

Photographer Donna Dufault discovered beauty behind the food created by talented chefs throughout New England, and a few in New York. While on shoots to capture perfectly plated culinary creations, there is a some down time she explained.

Donna Dufault's Pans on display at Culinary Imaginings.
Donna Dufault’s Pans on display at Culinary Imaginings.

Instead of idly standing to the side, Donna began looking around. When she did, she found an appreciation for the tools behind the scenes of every dining experience. She even saw art. As she described when we sat down to discuss her upcoming show, she didn’t photograph these works in the same way she would photograph a delicate dessert. Her brief downtime on shoots didn’t allow for lighting and staging.

The creative restraints opened her up to a new process, and the result is her new show called Culinary Imaginings. Her first major solo show is compromised of over 30 photographs and opens on Wednesday, January 20 at the Worcester Center for Crafts’ Krikorian Gallery (25 Sagamore Rd., Worcester). The reception is January 25, 2016 from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. It’s a Monday evening to accommodate the hospitality industry considering they are the ones who inspired her work.

Donna Dufault's Blue Glasses on display at Culinary Imaginings.
Donna Dufault’s Blue Glasses on display at Culinary Imaginings.

“The dents, scratched, cracks and patina all create beauty in their imperfections,” said Dufault. “I truly enjoy tracking down the tools, and documenting their vulnerability from human treatment.”

In anticipation for the show, a few pieces were put on display it the Center for Crafts shop—and immediately sold. That may be a little foreshadowing to a potentially sold out show. From the previewed works, it’s obvious that these photographs are easy to put up in your home to either show off your appreciation for great art or your love of the kitchens that create amazing food for us to enjoy and bond over.

The photographs that sold featured pans, but there are also photographs working with glassware.

“I am drawn to photograph the glass versions I find in my travels. Stacked, arrayed, or layered, the line and repetition of glass creates playful patterns of light and color,” says Dufault. “Light, reflections and distortions revealed through the glass create beautiful, painterly abstractions. It’s a wonderful challenge to compose and capture an image before the light changes and the enchantment of color and luminosity is lost.”

In conjunction with the exhibit, Hungry Minds is coming to the Center for Crafts on Monday, February 1 at 5:30 p.m. This storytelling event will take you further into the kitchen with tales from the inside. Chef Chris Rovezzi of Rovezzi’s Ristorante in Fiskdale, Mass. will share stories from the line. Chef Alina Eisenhauer of Sweet Bar and Kitchen in Worcester will also hit the stage. Professional storyteller, novelist (and Dufault’s ringer for the night) Brendyn Schneider is traveling from Boston to entertain attendees. Dominic Mercurio of Foodies of New England Magazine will do a wine tasting. Finally, the artist herself will speak about her creative process and her passion for Culinary Imaginings.

Then on the last day of the show, February 27, you’re all invited to a pasta dinner slash art workshop. You can eat and make a ceramic plate to take home with you. Tickets are on sale now ($40 for adults, $10 for children).

We’re looking forward to seeing what Dufault comes up with next. When I asked her what’s next, she said she may start a collection focused on artist’s tools. We can’t wait.