Touch-installation of 10,000 pinch unfired pots
The idea for this body of work was born in a kiln room where my friend and I, who are both ceramicists and teachers, were admiring tiny pinch pots students had ben making for class exercises.
We thought how amazing it would be to make thousands of them and to fill a gallery. So we decided to get get many people to make many, many little pots with us and see if we could do that.
Over some months we took clay everywhere with us, to parks, malls, dinner parties, under shady trees, afternoon teas, work ready organisations, lunch spots etc and see who would sit down with us.
The nicest thing abot this process was the time shared with others, people of all ilks, some we knew, many we didn't. This time of making was meditative or quietly chatty, and concentrating. We heard some great stories! and there was lots of laughing. The pinch pot process gave a comfortable democratic space as pinchers helped fill the boxes, and ofen became addicted!
Our installation was finally made with 10,000 pots out of clays of many types and colours, some mixed with ashes, dirt or sand, some dug locally and all, apart from a few hundred to give tonal variety were unfired. !
Touch was set up on the floor of Watch this Space Gallery in Alice Springs in a square, representing the topography of our desert country as we see it from the air as we fly in and out.
Visitors to the Space added further to the installation until it became a tide lapping out across the floor.
Watch out for a further installation in the clay pans with a drone fly by, before we recycle the clay for other exciting adventures
We thought how amazing it would be to make thousands of them and to fill a gallery. So we decided to get get many people to make many, many little pots with us and see if we could do that.
Over some months we took clay everywhere with us, to parks, malls, dinner parties, under shady trees, afternoon teas, work ready organisations, lunch spots etc and see who would sit down with us.
The nicest thing abot this process was the time shared with others, people of all ilks, some we knew, many we didn't. This time of making was meditative or quietly chatty, and concentrating. We heard some great stories! and there was lots of laughing. The pinch pot process gave a comfortable democratic space as pinchers helped fill the boxes, and ofen became addicted!
Our installation was finally made with 10,000 pots out of clays of many types and colours, some mixed with ashes, dirt or sand, some dug locally and all, apart from a few hundred to give tonal variety were unfired. !
Touch was set up on the floor of Watch this Space Gallery in Alice Springs in a square, representing the topography of our desert country as we see it from the air as we fly in and out.
Visitors to the Space added further to the installation until it became a tide lapping out across the floor.
Watch out for a further installation in the clay pans with a drone fly by, before we recycle the clay for other exciting adventures
Tea Ceremony
I had a residency in Beijing and began photographing and drawing hands, it was also a good way to meet people. A friend had written out in Mandarin what I was asking and people were very obliging.
But I became fascinated by the tea ceremonies that I was given, the attention paid to different teas, and the way of preparing and drinking them.I began making large tea prints using different tea leaf and food stuffs of my journeys, pomegranate, orange, persimmon allowing them to sit and make their singular marks as they dried.
This work was part of a curated exhibition 'Sequences and Cycles"of 5 ceramic artists from Central Australia. I used locally gathered materials to build with, termite mound, local clay, grasses, manure and recycled paper which I slaked in an old bath in the garden. Many friendly folk, some I knew some I didn't, offered to help mix these bath loads up, even the quite smelly manure ones, proving that playing with mud is a pretty innate thing. I left the forms as adobe structures to facilitate an easy recycling at some point. Recycled materials clay paper grasses cow manure bush fire termite mound mixtures,
Earth
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