Art students create crafts
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In its third year, the craft center’s art program introduces students to studies and careers in the art and craft field through demonstrations and intensive hands-on workshops in a variety of craft media. The program serves up to 600 students in the Upper Cumberland region including Warren, White, Bledsoe, Cannon, Fentress, Jackson, Overton, Putnam, Rutherford and Smith. All the projects are funded in part by the Tennessee Arts Commission.
Various workshops offered to the visiting students featured wheel throwing and handbuilding clay pottery, paper and fabric marbling, tie-dying, stained glass, copper forging, metal fabrication and pinhole photography. Exposure to these crafts gives some of them their very first experience in various arts, according to Gail Doss, workshop and events coordinator for the center, and can lead them into a lifelong vocation.
First, these creative students attended four 15-minute demonstrations focusing on glass blowing, wood turning, wheel-thrown pottery and blacksmithing. The remainder of the day was spent in one of the eight pre-selected workshops lasting 2-1/2 hours each.
