An Email from Jill,

I was delighted to receive an Email recently from Jill Nicholls.  Jill has a gallery called Something Special, in Riverton, which is in Southland, New Zealand.  I had the pleasure of actually meeting Jill a few months back when she called in and picked up some of my work for her gallery.  She proved to be a most intelligent and interesting person; she was an accomplished weaver, and was also refreshingly knowledgeable about pottery,  having begun to pot herself in recent years.  She also knew about potters that were important to me, such as Bernard Leach, and Michael Cardew.  Jill wrote to me to tell me about some new work with clay that she has been doing, and she will be showing 14 examples of her work in an exhibition at Invercargill's Southland Museum from August 26th.  Four other artists are taking part in the exhibition, namely Dawn Barry painting, John Wishart photography installation, Phil Newbury glass, Stuart King stainless steel sculpture

Here is an excerpt from Jill's Email

Hello Peter,

Thought you might like to see what I've done with the crackle glaze.

I did test tiles and found Janet de Boos glaze 47, a satin black to which I had added a little beech ash proved to be perfect for my purpose as I also wanted to create big blisters in grey and black. I did this by smearing the crackle back and forth with the brush over the black in a few places. The crackle on the top was very thick as was that surrounding the fissure in the centre.
 
I am experimenting with distorting the clay in the kiln by putting little blocks of kiln shelf under strategic places where I have induced cracks in the body clay. This is Abbotts Brick Red which I found readily cracks in normal throwing. I coiled the main pot then twisted it when almost leather hard. It was fired considerably hotter than recommended and I almost lost it when it slumped against another tall piece during a rather extended soak but both were able to be ground and recovered. Lots of fun.

One of the benefits of having a blog where I have been prepared to share information about the process of pottery, has been the letters that I have received "behind the scenes" from people like Jill.  A few years ago I tested the DeBoos glaze that Jill mentioned, and it looked like a really nice glaze, but I had no immediate use for it.  I more recently tested some crackle glazes, and I will, no doubt, use them one day, but not quite yet.  I am familiar with the clay that Jill talks about (although I haven't personally experienced cracking problems with it).  I use Abbots Brick Red myself when I am making planters and other earthenware pots.  It was great to see Jill pull the black glaze, a crackle glaze, and the earthenware clay together and to use them in a way that was quite different to anything I would have done myself.  I liked what she did with the firing, pushing the clay to a higher temperature than it was "supposed" to go to and deliberately stressing it by putting little blocks under the sculpture to make it twist when it was at high temperature. Such experiments are valuable ways of testing a material, and are also a good way of taking you out of a personal "comfort zone".  The results may challenge beliefs about what clay and glaze should do, and what potters should do, and may open the mind and imagination to further possibilities. 

I do like making mugs and bowls, and jugs and teapots, but it is good to keep open the possibility of doing other things with clay.  Honestly, when you were a child and first played with nice squishy mud outside somewhere after it had rained, was your first thought, "Ahh, I must make a mug with this stuff!"  Or did you enjoy the sticky feel of it between the fingers, and the splishy, splashy noises it would make as you stomped it with your feet?  Did you try making monsters or animals, or did you draw in it with a stick? 
 
I wish Jill well with her exhibition, and hope that her work inspires others to experiment, to take risks, and to rediscover imagination.

 
For those who might be interested....
 
DeBoos Glaze 47  Cone 3-5 (from Glazes for Australian Potters" J. DeBoos published in 1978 by Cassell Australia)

Nephaline syenite     75
Frit 3110 (4110)     15
Calcite     5
Ball clay QA or C     5
Manganese dioxide     4
Red iron oxide     8
Cobalt carbonate     2

Oxidation: Smooth satin-matt black.  Best at cone 4.
Reduction: Not suitable, as it becomes extremely metallic.

Comments

Linda Starr said…
I too have found blogs to be great resources; your post has given me inspiration to take some clay today, close my eyes and see what I come up with, with some squishy clay.
Peter said…
Good for you Linda,
A great idea to close the eyes and dream a bit with clay! Hope you have a great day. (that rhymes!) P.
Judy Shreve said…
Great post Peter. Thanks for sharing Jill's fabulous work. It's those folks who push the envelope that inspire us - isn't it? Wish I could see the exhibit.
gz said…
Sharing seems to be the way of most potters, by not being precious you gain more and develop
Peter said…
Hi Judy and Gwynneth,
Lovely to hear from you both. I have received so much help and encouragement from potters since I started potting, and it does seem to be one of the delightful things about this profession that sharing and helping is normal! I guess that very beginnings of potting have to do with service to others, think about storage jars, cooking pots, and pots for holding precious water.

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