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Aurore Chabot

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Aurore Chabot
Born1949 (age 74–75)[1]
New Hampshire
NationalityAmerican
Known forCeramic art

Aurore Chabot (born 1949) is an American ceramist who creates sculptures, wheel-thrown pieces using porcelain and terra cotta, and ceramic tile murals.[2]

Early life and education

Chabot was born in 1949 in Nashua, New Hampshire, and grew up in Wilton, New Hampshire, in a large family, where she was a middle child. Chabot received her bachelor's degree in fine arts from the Pratt Institute in 1971. She studied with Regis Brodie at Skidmore College in 1974, completing a Raku program. She then earned a master of fine arts degree from the University of Colorado in 1981.

Career

She began her post college work as a ceramicist in a studio on the Bowery, in New York City, which she shared with Peggy DuPont. In 1974 she received a grant from the New York State Council on the Arts, one of many awards she subsequently received. The Council on the Arts grant allowed her to set up a ceramics studio in Broadalbin, NY. She had moved to Broadalbin, NY with her then husband, Douglas Kabat (1946-), who she separated from in ~1975 and divorced in ~1978.

She has taught at the University of Vermont, and since 1988 has been a professor at the University of Arizona,[3] where she headed the ceramics program.[4] She has long been active with the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts, serving as Director at Large from 1999 until 2001 and Publications Director from 2001 until 2004 and being appointed to the Nominations Committee for Fall 2012 and Spring 2013.[5] She has successfully finished two significant national public art projects, and has been invited to several visiting artist programs. Chabot received a Governor's Arts Award in 1990, and has exhibited widely during her career, winning numerous honors and awards[4] including a pair of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts.[5] Her artwork has been featured in over a hundred national and international exhibitions, as well as various books and periodicals.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Shoebox Sculpture - Aurore Chabot".
  2. ^ a b "Chabot, Aurore – John Michael Kohler Arts Center". Retrieved 2023-05-03.
  3. ^ "Aurore Chabot". University of Arizona. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  4. ^ a b Jules Heller; Nancy G. Heller (19 December 2013). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-63882-5.
  5. ^ a b "Aurore Chabot – School of Art". art.arizona.edu. Retrieved 14 May 2017.