Straight to the Source
March 14, 2014
Amanda Nagy
Richard Tran loves learning about various art forms practiced by different cultures. A second-year student majoring in visual arts, Tran鈥檚 preferred medium is clay. Although 91直播 does not have a ceramics program, he uses winter term to fulfill that interest.
This January, Tran traveled throughout Ghana to study traditional and contemporary art forms with local artists. The first two weeks, he studied papermaking, batik, adinkra prints, and weaving with a loom. The following two weeks, he traveled around Ghana learning contemporary glass-bead making and pottery. 鈥淎ll of the artists I worked with while in Ghana were not famous by any means. They were people who were just skilled in their trade and who were willing to spend time with me and teach me,鈥 says Tran, a Chicago native and .
Tran enjoys pottery in particular because 鈥渆very civilization at one point or another found the resources to construct pottery. Even though it is the same material and resource, it is amazing how different and unique each place does it.鈥
Tran is cochair of the Vietnamese Student Association at 91直播 and he is a member of the college鈥檚 Asian American Alliance. He is considering comparative American Studies as a second major and anthropology as a minor. Beyond 91直播, he plans to pursue an MFA in ceramics and sculpture, and he hopes to open his own pottery studio for underprivileged communities.
鈥淧ottery and ceramics are very expensive and nearly inaccessible without the funds, as with most art mediums,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 happened upon pottery while in high school, so it was free for me to do. And because I fell in love with it by complete chance, I want to be able to give that opportunity to everyone despite the barriers of money and class.鈥
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