Have you ever experienced feeling broken and unsure how to move forward? Life’s challenges can leave us feeling shattered, but they also offer a chance to build strength, wisdom, and resilience giving us the opportunity to generate a rich life story.
Explore the transformative power of adversity through the Japanese art of Kintsugi. This beautiful technique repairs broken pottery with gold, turning flaws into celebrated features. The result is a piece that’s stronger, more beautiful, and more valuable than before—just like us.
What to Expect:
Create Your Own Personal Piece: Repair and transform broken pottery into a unique work of art symbolizing your strength and resilience.
Bring Your Own Piece or Use Ours: You can bring your own broken pottery or choose from our selection on-site.
Share and Reflect: Engage in meaningful discussions about personal experiences, insights, and triumphs as we work through the creative process together.
Join us and embrace your imperfections as we celebrate the beauty and strength that come from overcoming challenges.
Cost: $50
*Please RSVP with the Book Online button below!*
Robin Willis is the MACC’s Healing Arts Coordinator. She also works as the Exhibition and Events Manager and Director of Outreach. Robin has a Bachelor of Arts in Architecture from Clemson University with a minor in Entrepreneurship. She is a multi-discipline artist with emphasis in writing, mixed media abstract painting, alternative process photography, collage, and book arts and binding. In addition to her art practices, she holds several healing modalities certificates, such as extensive kundalini yoga teacher training and education, Reiki master, systemic family constellation facilitator, and depth psychology-based therapy trainings. As an avid learner, she explores and encourages others in their exploration in art, psyche, and our relationship to the micro and macro worlds within and around us. Influenced by John Muir’s quote, When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe, she fuses art, healing, and organization throughout her work and personal life as a creative-scientist minded person.
Kaylin Warden serves as the MACC’s Creative Design and Operations Manager. In this post, she oversees the organization’s graphic design work for exhibitions, events and special projects. She also coordinates the MACC’s arts outreach activities and assists with bookkeeping, among other duties. Kaylin, above all, is passionate about the arts. It comes as no surprise, then, that she is now pursuing a master’s degree in art history. When she’s not at the MACC, you can find her reading her favorite books (especially ones dealing with maritime mysteries), cooking, gardening, playing with her cat and two dogs, and cheering for the Nashville Predators.