Mountain Bowl, Mountain Fire—A Clay Retreat
with Jody Hojin Kimmel · Zen
Four-day clay retreat led by Jody Hojin Kimmel and Katie Yosha Scott-Childress at Zen Mountain Monastery. Participants learn bowl-making by hand, mark natural pigments, and fire pieces in a Raku kiln, integrating Zen practice with creative work.
About this retreat
This retreat treats clay as formal practice. Rather than a workshop grafted onto a meditation schedule, the bowl-making and firing become the container—pinching, marking, observing the clay's response to fire and pressure. That integration of art and Zen is the point, not an add-on.
Jody Hojin Kimmel leads from Zen Mountain Monastery, a Dharma Sangha affiliate in the Catskills. The four-day format is tight enough to move from raw clay to finished pieces, compressed enough that you're working at the edge of your skill the whole time. Raku firing—the quick, hot firing that cracks and darkens the glaze—reinforces an aesthetic Zen values: impermanence made visible, beauty in what breaks.
Go if you want to sit and make things with your hands, not as therapy or creativity-unlocking, but as direct work. If you've never thrown clay, the pinching method is forgiving. If you have experience, Raku's unpredictability will test what you think you know.
Full details from Zen Mountain Monastery
A four-day clay and arts retreat exploring bowl-making through the pinching method, mark-making with natural pigments from Mount Tremper, and traditional Raku firing. Led by Jody Hojin Kimmel, Sensei and Katie Yosha Scott-Childress, the retreat emphasizes the meditative practice of working with clay and culminates with high firing.
Also at Zen Mountain Monastery 03
Friday – Sunday
Exploring Wisdom and Compassion: Further Steps Along the Path of Zen
with Danica Shoan Ankele, Gokan Bonebakker
Zen Mountain Monastery
Saturday
Boundless Field Zazenkai
Zen Mountain Monastery
Thursday – Sunday · 4 days
Embodied Awakening of Silent Illumination
with Guo Gu
Zen Mountain Monastery