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Raku: Make & Take Ceramic Workshop

close up detail of a Raku-fired vase in white with black accents

Exclusive Experience

Did you know there are multiple ways to fire ceramics? 

Join exhibiting artist Robin Foster for a rare workshop exploring the expressive world of Raku firing. Known for its immediacy and unpredictability, Raku is an over-fire ceramic process where glowing-hot pieces are removed and rapidly cooled, creating dramatic, one-of-a-kind surface effects that cannot be fully controlled or repeated.

Glaze: One Hour

Participants will select from approximately 15 pre-made ceramic pieces created by the award-winning artist. With all materials provided, you’ll glaze and personalize your piece in about one hour of guided studio time.

Fire: 30 Minutes Per Batch

Step outside on the RiverPlace patio for a live Raku firing demonstration. Watch as pieces are fired in small batches (about two per batch), removed at peak temperature, and cooled. This post-firing reduction process produces unique surface variations, hallmarks of the Raku style. Each firing takes approximately 30 minutes.

Experience: Stay for Your Piece or the Full Session

Stay for your piece or the full process. Participants are welcome to leave once their work is complete or remain to watch the entire firing unfold throughout the session. Get to know Robin and benefit from his years of knowledge and experience, and enjoy seeing the incredible details on each work as they emerge from the fire.

Take Home a Unique Piece

The beauty of the Raku process means each participant leaves with a finished, one-of-a-kind ceramic piece shaped by fire, atmosphere, and chance. No two results are ever the same.

Cost: $35 | Seats: 12 | Age: 14+ (younger with adult)

a headshot of artist Robin Foster standing in front of a brick wall

ROBIN FOSTER

Robin Foster is a contemporary ceramic artist working within a medium shaped by millennia of human hands—clay. Based in Red Lake Falls, Foster has been working in clay since 1996 and maintains both a home studio and a workspace on Main Avenue, grounding his practice in the rhythms and landscape of his community.

At the core of Foster’s work is fire—not as a single step, but as a spectrum of control. He works across multiple firing methods, including pit firing, several variations of Raku, high-temperature wood firing, mid-fire electric kiln processes, and crystalline glazing. Each approach exists at a different point between precision and unpredictability. In the controlled environment of an electric kiln, results can be carefully managed and repeated; in contrast, pit firing places the work at the mercy of flame, atmosphere, and chance, where surfaces emerge through smoke, ash, and the unknown.

These variations are central to what draws Foster to the medium. As he describes it, he is captivated by “the precision of crystalline glazes, the color and usability of cone 6 glazing, the way two Raku processes can use the same clay and kiln yet produce drastically different aesthetics, and wood-fired results that are shaped as much by the movement of fire through the kiln as by the artist’s hand.”

Each firing method requires different clay bodies, surface treatments, and technical decisions, resulting in work that shifts dramatically in color, texture, and form. Whenever possible, Foster sources clay locally, allowing the material itself to carry the imprint of the surrounding landscape. This connection to Red Lake Falls remains central to his practice, with porcelain used selectively when a higher level of refinement and luminosity is desired.

Largely self-taught, Foster has developed his voice through decades of hands-on exploration and the guidance of mentors across the country, including Richard Bresnahan (Minnesota), Butch Holden (Minnesota), Charlie Riggs and Linda Riggs (Nevada), Tom Coleman (Nevada), and Matt Long (Mississippi).

Through this range of techniques, Foster explores the tension between intention and outcome—where control gives way to chance, and where each piece is ultimately shaped by its encounter with fire.

Awards, Achievements, and Exhibitions

Foster has received many recognitions for his work, including being named Northwest Minnesota Artist of the Year in 2007. His work has been acquired into the permanent Margaret H. Harlow Ceramics Teaching Collection at Bemidji State University and has been widely exhibited across northwest Minnesota, including appearances in It’s Only Clay at Bemidji’s Watermark Art Center. He has also been selected for commissioned work, including the 2012 Community Supported Arts project.

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Clay Fish Wall Hanging with Betsy Saurdiff

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July 1

Free Crafts for Kids: Whimsical Wind Chimes