CCI-newsletter-1979-22-September-October

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SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1979

NEWSLETTER

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Craftsmanship is our

Finnish Glass

I.S.D.C. Exhibition

Sponsored by the Crafts Council for Kilkenny Arts Week, and opened by Mrs Patsy Duignan, the exhibition of Finnish Glass drew very high critical acclaim from the press. The exhibition, a travelling exhibition and one on which little expense was spared, was brilliantly mounted. The glass exhibits were superb examples of • design and craftsmanship. In many cases the startlingly simple and beautiful works were the ideal blend of the designer and the master glass blower, the former the creator of the concept, the latter the technician without whom the finished work would not have been possible.

The Irish Society for Design and Craftwork are holding their annual exhibition in the Bank of Ireland Exhibition Centre, Baggot Street, Dublin 2 from 15 to 26 October. This exhibition of the oldest society of craftsmen in Ireland annually attracts both leading craftsmen and students to show their work and provides one of the few opportunities . for craftsmen to exhibit work for sale in Dublin.

Business Craft Council's 1979 conference, which is being held at the Silver Spring Hotel in Cork, on 2, 3, and 4 November, is business-oriented and at a professional level for professional craftsmen who earn their livelihood from their craft. Details of the conference will have been circulated at the time of going to press but the names of speakers will not have been included. This year's speakers will be drawn from both working craftsmen and from business advisory agencies so that the discussion and dialogue may be as fruitful as possible and examine the problems of the professional craftsman as a business­ man which, if an adequate living is to be earned, the craftsman must be.

Mrs Duignan, in her opening address, said that based on a very long tradition Key speakers will include: Mr P O Slattara, of Soda Glass making, the Finnish glass Chairman of IDA; Mr Eamonn Cahill of Irish industry appeared to have been steadily Productivity Centre; Mr W Leaney of built up through a well-designed pro­ Allied Irish Banks; Mr Val Sheehan of gramme and that it appearedito her that the VAT Office; Mr Bill Moloney of Aer the main key to its success was possibly Rianta; Mr N Millar of Bord Failte and because the programme planners recog­ Mr John Makepeace, the UK master nised, accepted and acted on the con­ craftsman in furniture. Other speakers at cept, which she quoted from Fin/and— time of going to press were not yet con­ an Introduction: "In order that a firmed. sound technical knowledge and theoretical terms could become part The conference, as usual, will open with of the designers' preparation for their a dinner at which, this year, the careers, close cooperation between Minister for Labour, Mr Gene Fitzgerald, industry and the art colleges was will be the speaker and will officially essential." open the conference. The conference weekend will cost from a maximum of £42.50 for single room and all meals in Silver Springs to what­ ever participants can arrange for them­ selves in guest house accommodation. The registration fee for all participants is £5.00.

Mrs Duignan said that this cooperation, though not easily obtained, was achieved c. 1920/1930 and almost overnight the success could be measured and Finnish Design and craftsmanship quickly gained the international accep­ tance and acclaim which it continued to hold. " I believe there is an important

The concentration on improving standards of necessity make it a relatively small exhibition in craft terms but one well worth the support of the public. It is all too easy to mount a large exhibition provided the funds are available or to fall between the twin dangers of, on the one hand being a mini trade fair, and on the other, showing the widest selection irrespective of merit. The Society's encouragement of student works of high merit is commendable as, apart from the National Crafts Com­ petition, they have scant opportunity of offering their work to the public on exhibition. message here for the Irish craft industry and all who are involved in it," said Mrs Duignan who expressed the happiness of Crafts Council of Ireland at being associated with the exhibition, as sponsors. She congratulated the organiser of the Kilkenny Arts Week for providing an opportunity for as many people as possible to see and learn from the ex­ hibition as visual exposure to good work from other countries was essential for design stimulation and for measurement of quality.


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