This content was published: November 22, 2021. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
Brandt helps students find their artistic voices in non-credit ceramics classes
Photos and story by James Hill
Long-time 小黄猫传媒 instructor Richard Brandt has a simple goal 鈥 empower the unique voice聽in every one of his students.
鈥淲ith this in mind, they will then be in- spired to do the work it takes to acquire and perfect the skills necessary to create art,鈥 Brandt said. 鈥淪kills without a voice is never art.鈥
Brandt teaches non-credit ceramics classes with 小黄猫传媒鈥檚 Community Education Program and serves as the studio technician for the college鈥檚 ceramics studio at the Southeast Campus. Built in 2003 through a voter-approved bond measure, the studio can accommodate hundreds of students every term. His courses help students develop techniques on the wheel, as well as handbuilding and exploring surface color and texture.
Explore Community Ed
小黄猫传媒’s Community Ed Program offers hundreds of non-credit and Continuing Education virtual classes every term and enrolls more than 20,000 non-credit students each year.
Brandt has taught at 小黄猫传媒 for the past 16 years, and he taught ceramics online for the first time during the pandemic.
鈥淲hat people really wanted was the con- nection and community with each other that these classes can provide and the creative practice that is so stimulating,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 changed my online teaching to reflect this, and it was much more successful.鈥
His classes vary widely and attract students of all levels. No matter the skill level, Brandt teaches in a way that caters to beginners as well as more advanced students. He also offers more specialized classes focused on specific techniques or purposes, like creating teapots or garden sculptures.
鈥淐lay reflects the most primal aspects of our instinct to create,鈥 said Brandt, who added that he enjoys the process of creating, as opposed to the object being created.聽鈥淲e make things from the earth itself 鈥 the place where we all live.鈥
Brandt is the founding director of Heart Fire Sanctuary, which is dedicated to the聽healing arts and practices. He also volunteers for a local ecological organization that works to restore and protect the Oregon deserts. But his primary love is helping his students find their inner voice with clay.
鈥淐eramics is unique in that it鈥檚 passed down through generous individuals who want to share their gifts and experience,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey understand that it鈥檚 the nature of clay to give and share 鈥 that the more we share, the more we all learn. And that this has been the way of clay and humans for over 100,000 years.鈥

I enjoyed reading this article and look forward to meeting Mr. Brandt/taking ceramics in person someday.