Sunday, February 22, 2015
Saturday, February 21, 2015
Last Stages of the Tile
Everything is in its place ... The additions, textures are finalized and most of the cleanup done. This is the point I decided to stop. Major changes would require remaking too much of the piece and are better saved for another work, minor changes could go on forever in this type of composition. In the end I felt that there was cohesion and flow across the tile (and that the Law of Diminishing Returns was setting in.) I'm also starting to move on mentally to the next project and feeling the need to wrap up.
A good photo is really helpful as I head into the final stage. Several incomplete areas are obvious in the picture, but were missed in the cleanup session. It will only take a few minutes to fix them and then the tile will sit in its plastic wrapping for a few days to even out the moisture in the clay. Then it gets unwrapped and cut into segments before being allowed to dry in preparation for the bisque firing. In the meantime I'm keeping my eyes peeled for cone 6 electric firings so I can test glazes to use on it in the final firing.
Friday, February 6, 2015
Added elements and Ladi Kwali
I made some changes to the tile, adding a raised element on the left side and changing the raised bars on the top right. Much better. I went back to my color sketch to pick up ideas. The vague nature of the drawing really pays off now. Since a lot of it is amorphous, I can let my imagination run and see selective images that are effectively already there and working right. I plan to tap the same source when I start retexturing the raised parts.
I put three pots in the mid-range soda firing with a commercial celadon on them. I'm not very practiced at spraying so we'll see how they turn out. The glaze is one I'm considering for this tile and another one I made earlier. Glazing is a little hair-raising since I have a lot of time and effort invested in the tile. I made a series of mugs with a similar design so I can test, test, test. I seriously doubt I'll take a chance on firing them in an atmospheric kiln... Too much risk of warping and the kilns are notorious for dropping crud into the glaze. The results in soda will be interesting but I think it'll be electric in the end.
On to other things! I have a couple of place settings to make for a Habit for Humanity fund raiser. The theme is "Africa." I've been googling African pottery and thought I might like to do a sort of Egyptian motif, but I stumbled across Nigerian pottery, Ladi Kwali. She is very famous in Nigeria and is even depicted on their currency! The technique is one I have used before... I don't really want to take time right now to figure out something totally new. I think I'll make coil and slab constructions, coat them in underglaze and use scrafitto, maybe some water etching too. The challenge will be to return to my drawings or make new ones to glean content from. I might do some drawings from things in my yard... Lizards, ants, tropical plants, maybe palmetto bugs and then pull some motifs to repeat as bands.
Monday, February 2, 2015
Removing the Texture
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| After the texture was removed |
After comparing the original sketches to the tile as it exists right now, I decided to smooth out all the texture that was created when I sculpted the raised parts. It was just too hard to see what was going on with that much busy-ness on the surface. That took pretty much all afternoon, but now I can really see the contours and decide whether or not I want to change some of the elements, including the outer contour. Right away I'm bothered by the vertical bars at the top, the wider bar especially. One the one hand I don't want to get into a kind of boring regimentation, but one the other hand I feel like it looks awkward like it is. The upper left corner looks better than it did but I'm not happy with the shape overall. Also I want to bring up some of the repeating shapes that step into the distance in the pattern sketch. There's plenty of work to do before it gets cut and dried.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Establishing relative depth in the tile
The finalizing begins! Today I'll work on surface textures. I would like the tile to show the same depth of relationships as the drawing. Since some of the ground level shapes are not receeding as well as I would like, I made a new stamp with a star burst pattern that is creating a nice rich embossed pattern. The heavier texture should fall behind the light pineneedle brushing once the glaze is applied. The raised forms will be taken to a relatively even state so I can see how they look untextured. Then I'll go back in and make some decisions. Since the glaze will be a fairly uncomplicated celadon, the textures should separate spatially by simply varying them in a straightforward way (letting the glaze break and pool across the surface to define the forms in space.)
Location:
St Petersburg, FL
Friday, January 9, 2015
Developing the Motif as a Sketch
Here's my current tile project being developed using the new method.
I start with a section of an ink drawing as before. The segment is imported into Sketchbook and I start working it up into a usable model for the tile. The original drawing forms the base layer and subsequent layers are added on top of it, letting me preserve aspects of the sketch intact while altering others freely. Also, layers can be temporarily hidden and merged. You can really experiment and work with the image at a lot of levels with these tools.
At one point I feel like I need to adjust the design and rotate the underlying photo. You can see the tilted photo under the sketch in the next illustration. I have adjusted the opacity of the photo so that I can just barely see it under the sketch. When I feel like there's enough information in the sketch to move on to the real world, I save a cleaned up version to my photo library. From there it is available across all my devices and I can refer to it as I'm working in whatever way is handy. Drawing apps don't always share well, but hopefully that will be something the developers work on in the future! So, for now: photo library!
| Digital sketch layered over photo |
| Digital sketch cleaned up |
| Pattern drawn freehand from sketch |
This drawing is going to become a flat tile. For that I plan to use a pattern, so the next step is to draw the image out on newsprint. I like to do this freehand and I don't worry if it departs from the sketch. The sketch is just the basic idea and it evolves as it moves into each phase of the tile-making process.
Some areas are shaded with pencil to begin establishing spacial relationships, and to indicate which pieces will be dimensional. These are to be cut out of a second slab, numbered and applied on top of the base slab.
At this stage I also adjust the cutting lines, seen here in red. In the digital sketch, they were made on a separate layer. The tile will be cut into parts so that it can be reassembled during mounting. During each stage the cutting pattern changes to accommodate variations in the design.
| Clay slabs cut and assembled |
From the pattern I cut and assemble the main design of the tile. Once I'm satisfied with the structure of the composition I begin to use the sketch once again as a source for adding the details and textures that will make the drawing come to life and work with the glaze to give me the finished work of art!
(Note: this project is in process so I will continue to post pictures as it progresses.)
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