Subscribe to our Craft Dispatch e-newsletter to stay looped in to all things craft! Sign Up ×

Fall 2021 American Craft Forum: The Secret to Collaboration With Omar Tate and Gregg Moore

Fall 2021 American Craft Forum: The Secret to Collaboration With Omar Tate and Gregg Moore

Start date

Thursday, September 30, 2021, 8:00am

End date

Thursday, September 30, 2021, 9:30am
american craft forums the secret to collaboration with gregg moore and omar tate 1 pm ct sept 30 2021 hosted on zoom moderated by anjula razdan

Fall 2021 American Craft Forum

Thursday, September 30, 2021, via Zoom
11 a.m. PT | 12 p.m. MT | 1 p.m. CT | 2 p.m. ET

Register below

What does it mean to truly collaborate in real and meaningful ways? And for all of you creatives out there, how do you meld your artistic vision—which is often very personal—with someone else’s? Who has ownership of ideas? Of work? How does collaboration affect the balance of power in those relationships?

These are some of the questions that arise out of most creative collaborations, and have certainly been part of the ongoing conversation between chef and visual artist Omar Tate, who cofounded Honeysuckle Projects, and artist, designer, and educator Gregg Moore. The two first met as part of a collaboration that started through the Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture in upstate New York, where Tate was part of the Chef in Residence program and Moore was the Stone Barns Art Fellow. Moore’s ongoing chef collaboration is with Dan Barber, co-owner and executive chef at the restaurant Blue Hill at Stone Barns.

Moderated by writer Anjula Razdan and presented in conjunction with the Fall issue of American Craft magazine, we invite you to join us on a deep dive into this particular collaboration: a microcosm of what true collaboration can look like as a kind of kinship—with yourself, your materials, and with others, be they writers, artists, chefs, designers, or an amalgamation of many different identities.

Read the article inspiring this conversation

Learn more about Omar and Gregg's collaboration and see work they created together in "More Than a Plate," a feature story from the Fall 2021 issue of American Craft written by Anjula Razdan.

salad inside of a glass orb on a cement platter with carved letters and impressions

Register for this forum session

Fill out my online form.

In Conversation

portrait of gregg moore

Gregg Moore is an artist, designer, and educator. His studio practice explores the relationship between ceramics and new media, drawing from historical foundations while questioning and investigating perceptions of the ceramic field. His current work ranges from ceramic tableware, mixed media sculpture, and multimedia installation that examines the practices of gardening, farming, cooking, and eating. Moore received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Geosciences from Skidmore College and his Masters of Fine Arts degree from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University. He is a professor of Visual and Performing Arts and director of the Ceramics program at Arcadia University.

greggfmoore.com | @greggfmoore

portrait of omar tate

Omar Tate is a chef, artist, and cofounder of Honeysuckle Projects, a multifaceted food company that focuses on the nuanced cultures and cuisines of the Black diaspora. Omar has emerged as a visionary and a leading thinker on the restaurant industry’s cultural development as a whole. He specifically focuses on race and ethnicity to tear down structural barriers through his practice in Honeysuckle, his pop-up cultural concept. In 2020, Honeysuckle was named pop-up of the year by Esquire magazine, and in 2021, Time magazine named Omar as one of the 100 innovators to watch as part of their “Time100 Next” list.

honeysucklephl.com | @coltrane215

Help Make Our Forums Possible as a Member

Join the American Craft Council to receive a subscription to our magazine and help support a range of nonprofit programs that strengthen our community and connect people to craft.

Join To Provide Support

Cover of Fall 2021 issue of American Craft

Special thanks to our sponsors

This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a Minnesota State Arts Board Operating Support grant thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund
Windgate foundation logo