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  • Apr 14, 2026, 6:26 PM

    @eishiya
    That is very much the other way around over here. At universities ONLY the ones who give a degree in ceramic art will have kilns and courses. You need years of preknowledge in clay making/fine art to even apply.

    Exception can be universities where teachers (art teachers) study, but the courses would very rarely be open to all students. A few summer courses maybe.

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  • Apr 14, 2026, 6:44 PM

    @AasaMariaHedberg In my US experience, beginners aren't trusted anywhere near kilns, but the main benefit of taking an introductory ceramics course is that you have an experienced instructor who will take care of the firing for you, so you can *get* that experience with clay, glazing, etc.

    Then, if there are further courses available, you might work your way up to using the kiln yourself, at which point you'll have the "years of preknowledge".
    Sounds like Sweden lacks the intro courses?

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  • Apr 14, 2026, 6:51 PM

    @AasaMariaHedberg (Again though, I want to emphasise that, at least as far as I know, these opportunities are *not common* in the US! And often, the opportunities that do exist *stop* at the intro level, with no official/accredited route to learning more advanced skills. So a town might have a potter who'll teach basic pottery classes for hobbyists and do the firing, but to learn beyond that, you either become BFFs with the one potter, or hit the books and build/buy your own kiln.)

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  • Apr 14, 2026, 7:02 PM

    @eishiya
    Its done in a very different way here. What you describe is exactly the same in South Africa and the UK.

    Here, a basic knowledge on clay and firings are or at least have been required to even apply. So we have something called folkhögskola a school form in between where you can study ceramics (or what not) in a gap year or two. Then application is usually only judged from an aesthetic point of view so sometimes you don't have to send imagery of even a single piece of ceramics. But, >

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  • Apr 14, 2026, 7:11 PM

    @eishiya
    If accepted, your teachers suppose you know a lot. The university course of a BA in Stockholm is a BA in Fine Art but in and of the material clay. Students wanting to become potters are often not really feeling welcome.

    Telling it the rough way, it does vary from the handful of university and it also varies over time. Gothenburg university has a little different way, perhaps more open to learning from scratch at site and if your goal is to 'just' become a production potter.

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  • Apr 14, 2026, 7:20 PM

    @AasaMariaHedberg This sounds a lot like US art schools. They do provide introductory courses in various fields, but you have to demonstrate skill just to be accepted to the school, so they serve mainly to make sure everyone in a field has the same groundwork for year 2+, rather than to teach basic skills from scratch. But where the art school is part of a larger university, the intro-level classes are open to people from other parts of the university, who didn't need a portfolio to get in.

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  • Apr 14, 2026, 7:30 PM

    @AasaMariaHedberg Didn't have room in that post to mention again that, as far as I know, they rarely offer ceramics as a speciality, or at all.

    And where they do offer it, since the degree offered by an art school is a BA or a Master of Fine Arts, it's probably very much a fine arts environment where a production craftsperson will feel out of place.

    Someone not aiming to do fine arts would probably do something more akin to an apprenticeship, the "BFFs with the nearest working potter" route.

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