Saturday, August 29, 2009
Morning skies over Mt Cargill
The photos in this video were taken on Sunday mornings at 30 minutes after sunrise between April and August 2009. This is approximately the period when daylight saving ended and begins again. This will be part of my final year BVA presentation. The 'Scherzo' excerpt movement from Beethoven's No.9 was in my default music library and fitted my images. Not the music I had in mind which was more akin to 'Winter' Vivaldi's Four Seasons etc but I then recalled this same scherzo from A Clockwork Orange and thought, if it was good enough for Stanley Kubrick, it is good enough for me!!! And besides, musically I think it fits.
Friday, August 28, 2009
more pots
This is another experiment in the 'green' range. My intention was to install 6 or 8 pots in various greens as part of my final exhibition for SITE. However, now that I am building the 7th & 8th pots in this way, and four of these vessels are 70cm high, I feel I am no longer enjoying making them. Recently I thought I would only make 4 tall pots and glaze them in the colours of the four seasons instead of the 'green' installation because I thought the glaze effects would be more challenging. Scott, my tutor from Sculpture, said I should do both!
I like these 'white' pots very much. They are made from Abbots white clay with the addition of earthenware clay in parts. This causes a frozen movement in the shape of the pot as the clays shrink at different rates when being fired.
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Mistakes!
These pots were also overfired and as a consequence, the glazes have become glossy and flattened while the stains-in-slip bands have become more intense. In addition the red earthenware clay has become more khaki. They are not what I expected and while they offer something else, and are also on public display at Quadrant, I suspect I may end up re-firing them.
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Latest pots
I refired these as the first firing went beyond Cone 6 and flattened the colours. I added some orange stain in slip as an accent and applied a matt white glaze over the top of the previously white stripes and I am happy with the result.
This pair of jugs have fired beautifully. The olive colour is most unusual and I will use this glaze on one of my large vessels which are part of the 'green' range.
Saturday, August 8, 2009
New landscape vessels
I intended to make a replica of "small turquoise jug" and used exactly the same glaze but this one has come out more green than turquoise - the vagaries of different firings.
This pot continues my experimental smaller landscape vessels range.
This pair of vessels are quite interesting - sombre, wintery and yet with glints of gold and the suggestion of a blue skyline - very Central Otago I think.
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