February At The Old Post Office, (Part Two)... A Bowl, getting up close and personal!
The process of making a pot or bowl on the potter's wheel is a physical one. The object is brought to life through the potter's hands and fingers. Centering, lifting, shaping, forming, coiling, collaring, smoothing, cutting, joining, the process of making is described by "doing" words that are expressive of physical effort and touch. My favorite ceramic objects are usually ones where the potter has not turned the piece excessively with a metal tool, or smoothed away all evidence of having been made by a human hand.
Throwing demonstration at the Otago Museum in 2015. Photo Rhonda Beck. |
Imagine how boring it would be to a visit to an art gallery if all the paintings in it had been airbrushed, if your favorite Monet, Rembrandt, Frans Hals, De Kooning, or Bonnard, had no visible brush strokes and their canvasses were flat and smooth!
One of the pleasures of handling hand made pottery is being able to pick up the item and feel weight, balance, and texture. This pleasure is denied to the viewers of blogs... so we will just have to rely on the eyes and some imagination.
I thought I would introduce you to a porcelain bowl that I glaze fired part way through February. The bowl was probably around 15 1/2 inches (393mm) when wet and slimmed down to about 12 3/4 inches (324mm) in diameter when fired. Porcelain shrinks a great deal when it is fired because it becomes glassy and vitrified. visualize of a pile of powder mysteriously turning into a puddle of liquid, and you will see what I mean. This makes porcelain strong, non absorbent, and translucent if thinly thrown, but the extreme shrinkage makes it hard for the potter to visualize the final size.
The bowl has a deep foot underneath it that I added when the bowl was leather hard and still a little pliable. There are a number of ways of adding a foot to a bowl, one is to leave the base very thick to start with and then to remove surplus clay with a loop tool, another would be to throw a little cylinder of clay and add that when the bowl and the cylinder are leather hard, but, when making a deep foot ring on a large bowl I prefer adding a coil of clay, centering it, then throwing the coil to its finished size. I sometimes cut out little half round openings in the foot with my cut off wire.
I used 4 glazes on the bowl, and I applied them by pouring. I hold the bowl in one hand, and pour glaze from a small saucepan full of glaze that is held in the other hand. I do this over an old metal Wok, which usually succeeds in catching most of the run off glaze!
The first to go on was BTM (black tenmoku)
This is a saturated iron glaze that gives a lustrous brown black when fired to a high enough temperature. I like to fire the top part of the firing slowly when using this glaze, and hold the kiln near the peak temperature for half an hour or so.
Over that went a good splash of a Janet deBoos clear glaze (number 144 from her first book) that I modified by adding rutile and copper carbonate. This gives a nice pale green glaze over a white clay, or a variable optical blue when over a dark glaze or clay.
Over that went AV1 which is a dolomite matt glaze that gives a smooth, slightly oily feeling glaze when used by itself on a pot. Over a saturated iron glaze it gives lacy patterns which vary a great deal depending on how thickly this glaze is applied.
Finally I poured on a splash of a saturated iron glaze that gives a lustrous red. This is based on a recipe that may go back to the Chinese Song Dynasty. I found it in a 1997 Ceramics Monthly article about a wonderful potter from Taiwan called Wang Chun Wen.
The bowl was fired to cone 10 in an electric kiln. The firing was done slowly near peak temperature to give time for the glazes to mature and intermingle nicely.
BTM
55 Nepheline Syenite
15 Talc
15 Wollastonite
10 Ball Clay
15 Silica
8 Red iron oxide
DeBoos glaze 144 Cone 9 - 10 (modified)
40 Potash Feldspar
25 Silica
15 Whiting
10 Ball Clay
5 Zinc Oxide
+ 3 rutile
+ 2 copper carbonate
AV1 cone 10 a high magnesia/alumina silky matt glaze probably best in reduction.
34.7 Potash Feldspar
19.6 Dolomite
3.1 Whiting
23.6 Kaolin
18.9 Silica
Wen/Conrad translation of Chinese recipe. I modified this (the original called for 10% red iron oxide and 4% Edgar Plastic Kaolin, I added 9 % yellow ocher to supply some of the iron, and all of the clay to the recipe. I also adjusted the silica and feldspar amounts to take account of the change of clay.).
47 Potash feldspar
10 Bone Ash
8 Talc
17 Silica
9 Yellow Ocher
8 Red Iron Oxide
The original Wen/Conrad translation was as follows
48 Feldspar
10 Bone Ash
8 Talc
20 Silica
4 Edgar Plastic Kaolin
10 Iron Oxide
Comments
that is a gorgeous glaze combination that works so well in a reduction firing. Very generous of you to put up the recipes too..
Good to hear from you. Always happy to put up glaze recipes, it is nice to see them being used. Just a quick correction... the bowl was fired in Oxidation. I did say somewhere that the AV1 glaze is probably best in reduction which might have confused you. In fact all the glazes should work well in reduction, but would give a different looking result.
Hi Melissa,
Nice to hear that you embrace happy accidents too! It is taking me quite a long time to feel freer with throwing and with glazing (it is such a struggle to get these things right to begin with!!), my instincts are for freer work, but I can be too self critical to let it happen!
Hi Patti,
Lovely to hear from you. We do live in strange times where we are surrounded by so much stuff that is machine made and has no humanity at all. I think that birds have the right idea, in that they raise their young in nests that they have made themselves. I was particularly fond of a pair of blackbirds that we had here one year, they made their nest in a dense tangle of a black current bush that I had planted and let go a bit wild. I often think their young had a great start to life with all that healthy fresh fruit and vitamin C!!
Thanks for that, my first thought was that I had probably written "reduction" by mistake as I was very tired when writing the blog post having been up at 2 hour intervals all night checking my kiln and had written the blog post to keep myself awake whilst waiting for cones to go down! :-)
Good to hear from you. It is nice to have a few puzzles for people to solve, I wonder what imaginative theories could be arrived at to explain the wire marks on the base of the pot! I can see that the wetter foot ring could be a problem. I have tended to add it at an almost too early stage when the bowl is slightly softer than ideal and haven't had problems with the joint cracking whilst drying, but have sometimes deformed the base of the bowl through it being too soft. Bagging the bowl up to equalize drying is certainly a good idea and would allow for doing the foot ring when the bowl is stiffer. I do like the look of a deep foot ring, and there are all sorts of creative possibilities too.
Thank you for your helpful comment. I've been reading quite a bit about cortisone injections and worrying a bit about whether or not it was a good thing to do if it is offered to me. So it is good to hear that it has been helpful to you :-)