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STUDIO SESSION (January) with Kelly Devitt
The Leaking Body
This session is scheduled for Sundays, January 4, 11, 18, and 25 from 10am-noon PST (that’s Los Angeles time).
Registration is $320 and includes all four sessions.
Participants gather via Zoom.
About the Studio Session
Skin is a site of vulnerability and resilience—a surface that leaks, holds, resists, and remembers. It is our first boundary and our first language, the interface through which we encounter the world and through which the world reads us. The condition of our skin holds a visible record of experience and identity. It reflects histories of labor, care, trauma, and touch, while also shaping how we are perceived and categorized by others.
In this Studio Session, we draw parallels between material and flesh, considering clay as a sensuous, abject, and reflective body capable of exposing our own fragility and durability. Clay’s capacity to crack, mend, and endure, opens questions about how human bodies defend, reveal, transform, and protect. Both clay and skin bear the imprints of touch and time—reminding us that identity is not fixed, but continually formed at the surface, in relation to others and the world around us.
More details can be found here.
The Leaking Body
This session is scheduled for Sundays, January 4, 11, 18, and 25 from 10am-noon PST (that’s Los Angeles time).
Registration is $320 and includes all four sessions.
Participants gather via Zoom.
About the Studio Session
Skin is a site of vulnerability and resilience—a surface that leaks, holds, resists, and remembers. It is our first boundary and our first language, the interface through which we encounter the world and through which the world reads us. The condition of our skin holds a visible record of experience and identity. It reflects histories of labor, care, trauma, and touch, while also shaping how we are perceived and categorized by others.
In this Studio Session, we draw parallels between material and flesh, considering clay as a sensuous, abject, and reflective body capable of exposing our own fragility and durability. Clay’s capacity to crack, mend, and endure, opens questions about how human bodies defend, reveal, transform, and protect. Both clay and skin bear the imprints of touch and time—reminding us that identity is not fixed, but continually formed at the surface, in relation to others and the world around us.
More details can be found here.