Our first studio, Turning Earth Hoxton, opened in December 2013. Following a model popular in the US, it was the first dedicated open-access ceramics studio in London. Our second facility, in Lea Valley E10, opened in March 2017. Most recently, our Highgate studio opened its doors on 13th September 2022, continuing our mission to provide accessible ceramics spaces across London.
Open-access membership is at the core of what we offer. This allows users flexible access to facilities, at a time that suits them. We also run a regular schedule of pottery classes for people new to the craft, and for people who would like to develop their skills.
Turning Earth's mission is to cultivate craft both as an accessible hobby and as a viable career (we offer a full-time professional studio, In Production, in Leyton). We want to contribute towards a broad adult curriculum that will improve quality of life in the city. Our members come to Turning Earth for a variety of purposes, including to:
Everyone is welcome here. Beginners work alongside trained artists in a supportive community. There is no course work or requirement for entry, and you are free to make what you like.
We believe that when craft is available for all, the whole industry benefits. Interest in craftsmanship increases, and so does demand for expertise. An expanded hobby market creates teaching opportunities for professional artists, which can help to make their career more sustainable.
Our social and environmental philosophy: Turning Earth is proud to be part of a wider movement of maker-spaces, making collaborative working a normal part of London life. We believe the future will see participation replacing consumerism as the most important driver of our economies, and that this will increase both well being and environmental sustainability. We want to empower people to make the things they use every day by hand, to share these skills, and to sell locally made products within their community.
The urgent environmental task we face today is not just to say no to an unsustainable system of mass production, which relies on resource depletion and climate changing freight. Our real task is to build a new economy to replace it. Putting your hands in the earth to make something can be an important first step.
To support the emerging professionals among our membership, we provide:
Teaching opportunities. We support professional makers to develop as instructors, which allows them to supplement their income while providing high quality instruction to beginners.
Full time professional incubator studio, In Production. While Turning Earth is set up specifically for hobbyists and people who make ceramics on the side, many of our members graduate to our full time professional studio, from which they can launch a career. We count many of the current generation of emerging ceramic artists among our alumni.
Studio sales. These are open for members at all levels of development. They enable our members to interact with the public and develop a line of pieces that people want to buy.
Turning Earth is indebted to the Arts and Crafts movement at the beginning of the 20th century, which suggested that there should be no separation between utility and art. Our vision rests in the intuited feeling that we will naturally make life more beautiful when we take our aesthetic awareness, our right-brained feeling for things, as seriously as we take our rational understanding of the world.
We exist to enable people to make beautiful physical objects, and in doing so, to make their lives more beautiful: more centered, more fulfilled, more present to what they truly care about. We feel that in making this movement, we are encouraging a broader social shift towards living with care in our world.
T.S. Eliot, Burnt Norton