Pottery Experiences
Experience the joy of working with clay during one of our Pottery Experiences. This one-time pottery class will teach you the basics of wheel throwing or hand building in a two-hour session led by a skilled ceramicist.
We start each pottery experience by doling out drinks (we’ve got a variety of beverages to choose from, and students are welcome to BYOB as well). Then we take students on a tour of our studio where dozens of Santa Fe ceramic artists come to create. Paseo Pottery has been part of the local art scene for three decades, and our space includes both a working ceramics studio and a retail gallery. In the studio, artists feverishly design and create—think muddy mayhem, whirling wheels, fiery kilns, and sundry clay-coated potting paraphernalia—while in the gallery finished pieces are displayed and available for purchase.
Wheel Experience
Dive into the most popular method of making ceramics. Working at the wheel is a meditative, yet challenging process. In this two-hour class, our potters will take you through the process of throwing a piece of pottery on the wheel.
Private party
For groups of six or more, we host Private Pottery Parties. With the option to upgrade to our "pampered” package, we’ll make sure everyone enjoys your company outing, family reunion, or group get together.
Hand building Experience
In this one-time two-hour class, students will learn the ancient techniques of working with clay by hand. The slowness of these methods allow for deeper connection with the material and total freedom of expression through clay.
WHAT’S A POTTERY “EXPERIENCE”?
Pottery Experiences prioritize touching, forming, and manipulating clay into expressions of art and are experience-based, meaning that at the end of each session students recycle their work back into the clay mound. Students do not, however, walk away empty handed as they receive a $15 credit in the gallery, which is full of ceramics locally-handcrafted by Santa Fe artists.
There’s a long tradition of ceramic arts in New Mexico, and the process of making pottery is often viewed as a spiritual practice. Pottery is among the most ancient forms of art and is perhaps the most fleeting. Chards of ancient ceramics are scattered on bluffs and foothills throughout New Mexico and are a constant reminder of the transitory nature of our particular form of art and of our very human existence. For millennia, ceramic artists across New Mexico have transformed clay into vessels to be held between hands, to be filled with nourishment, to be brought to lips, and after serving their purpose, to be returned to the earth.
At Paseo Pottery we embrace this rich history, and we present our classes for travelers in the form of pottery “experiences.” During each experience, students have two hours to create their own works of art using the tools at their disposal in our studio, all the inner creativity they can muster, and a raw lump of clay. Our teachers start with a demonstration to give students basic pottery-making techniques, then act as guides while students unleash their inner artists and tap into the creativity they may find bubbling to the surface given the artistic energy that abounds in Santa Fe. Each student creates their own unique and beautiful expression of art. At the end of the experience, students present their masterpieces to the rest of the class, take photos if they wish, and then—in the spirit of embracing the ephemeral nature of art and of humanity—students ceremoniously recycle their masterpieces, deconstructing them, kneading them back into the lump of clay from which they came.
Similar to monks on the other side of the earth who spend days, even months, creating sand mandalas, only to then blow them away in an instant, ceramic experiences at Paseo Pottery encourage students to learn our craft, to create, to appreciate, and then to let go. One might think of our experience-based classes as “mud therapy.”
Experiences are led by our professional ceramic artists who volunteer their time. Cost includes a two-hour experiential class complete with libations, clay, materials, and tools.