That gig also brought Katz into contact with then-BCA curator and current Generator director Christopher Thompson. Additionally, Thompson included Katz in the BCA show “Human = Landscape” in 2009. Thompson was the chief curator at BCA from 2008 to 2012, and joined Generator in August last year.
In a recent phone interview, Katz said he’s excited to get started in the Generator shop facilities, which currently include basic wood and metalworking.
“Everything needs a deep reordering and cleaning,” he said. After that, he plans to build out the forge and add a foundry — a facility for melting and shaping metal.
His primary responsibility will be “to do whatever people want,” Katz said.
“[Education director Sarah Sprague] and Chris have very clear visions of what the community is hungry for, and I think I’ll just implement their goals,” Katz said. Essentially, makers gonna make — but they need the stuff to make with. So Katz will make that.
Katz said that what he learned at Hartford will likely prove useful at Generator. “We had a foundry, a glass-blowing studio that was new to me,” he said. “I love that material — it’s so immediate.”
Whether or not Generator expands into glass, some of Katz’s new colleagues —contemporary artists and fabricators — may very well come to visit. He hinted that Colin McMullen, who built a mobile sugar shack and conducted sugaring demonstrations in a low-income area of Hartford, could be one of them.


