Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Keyword
-
- Ceramics (8)
- Pottery (6)
- Ceramic (4)
- Sculpture (4)
- Clay (3)
-
- Art (2)
- Cone 3 (2)
- Tableware (2)
- Wood-fired (2)
- Analyses (1)
- Archives (1)
- Archives, Public art, University of Colorado Boulder, Chicano movement (1)
- Atmospheric-fired stoneware (1)
- Bird (1)
- CNC milled forms (1)
- Ceramic sculpture (1)
- Ceramic studio (1)
- Chicano Movement (1)
- Chicanx (1)
- China paint (1)
- Craft (1)
- Design (1)
- Devils playground (1)
- Digital technology with clay (1)
- Disruptive Technology (1)
- Earthenware (1)
- El Movimiento (1)
- Ethnographic research (1)
- Functional (1)
- Furniture (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 17 of 17
Full-Text Articles in Ceramic Arts
The Day Before The Day, Marlaina Lutz
The Day Before The Day, Marlaina Lutz
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
The reason any particular moment has the potential to change the course of your life is because of the accumulation of meaningful moments that happened in between. The in between is where care happens. It’s where acts of kindness are done without witnesses and where vulnerability is met with an unconditional reception. It’s where trust is built and where our darkest and brightest parts become exposed. Can you remember what you did the day before you decided someone was your best friend? Or what you did the day before you spoke to a parent for the last time? What about …
Tea Time With The Devil, Hamish Jackson
Tea Time With The Devil, Hamish Jackson
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
Tea time with the Devil
Tea Time with the Devil began with the hypothesis that I could create a diverse palette of glazes from one local material. I chose to base my experiments on a granite from Devil’s Playground in western Utah. I collected its rocks, hauled them back to USU and crushed them into powder. Each glaze contains at least 50% of the Devil’s granite. This palette resulted from much trial and error — mostly error. Between 2020 and 2023, I ran thousands of glaze tests to formulate and hone these surfaces.
Why this place and material?
The wild …
Artifiact, Max Saunders
Artifiact, Max Saunders
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
The main purpose of this body of work is to explore gestural mark making and wood kiln effects on functional and sculptural vessels. A limited number of forms, including teapots, cups and large sculptural vessels were made to explore different types of mark making and the different effects that can be achieved in the wood kiln. The end goal was a body of work that can be explored on many levels, from using the pots as functional vessels to exploring the larger work as dynamic gestural sculptures.
Sweet Nothing, Austin Riddle
Sweet Nothing, Austin Riddle
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
These pots were made as companions for you and your home. A vase for your table, full of freshly picked flowers as you and your partner eat breakfast and plan your day's activities. Large platters and compartment trays to present home-cooked meals with friends on a warm summer evening. Whiskey sippers that nestle in warm hands, topped off as needed from a half-empty bottle of Jack Daniels.
As a maker, I play these moments on repeat in my mind. As a designer, these scenarios direct the formal elements I develop for each piece. Pushing out an exaggerated belly on a …
The Los Seis De Boulder Sculpture Project: A Case Study Of Socially Engaged Archivist/Artist Collaboration At The University Of Colorado Boulder, Megan K. Friedel, Jasmine Baetz
The Los Seis De Boulder Sculpture Project: A Case Study Of Socially Engaged Archivist/Artist Collaboration At The University Of Colorado Boulder, Megan K. Friedel, Jasmine Baetz
Journal of Western Archives
As academic institutions and archivists around the nation grapple with the question of how to address existing monuments to racist histories at their institutions, how can archivists support the creation of new monuments on college and university campuses that reflect suppressed or oppressed histories of people of color? This case study explores the Los Seis de Boulder Sculpture Project, a socially engaged art project at the University of Colorado Boulder (CU Boulder), in which archivists in the CU Boulder Libraries' Archives supported and collaborated with a student artist and community members to create a public monument commemorating the deaths of …
The Aberration Of The Species, Kristin Ayla Murray
The Aberration Of The Species, Kristin Ayla Murray
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
The Aberration of the Species in an exhibition meant to encourage viewers to consider in impacts technology has had and continues to have on the relationships and interactions we experience in daily life.
Common Objective, Josh Scott
Common Objective, Josh Scott
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
Pots are like people. Gestural qualities can make pots appear to move like people. They form groups in ways that people might. Repeated forms on a pedestal can appear to be in formation like a military unit. More importantly, pots perform specific jobs or tasks in ways similar to people.
Inherently, the job someone holds or the function of a pot will have an effect on perceived importance. A funerary urn may seem to be a more important form than a coffee mug, yet both are committed to specific tasks. This can be likened to a lineman and a doctor. …
Reliquary, Matthew Sloan
Reliquary, Matthew Sloan
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
I am interested in ritual – the rituals we inherit, and those we choose for ourselves.
By situating the everyday mugs, cups, plates, and bowls next to objects more closely associated with ritual and ceremony, I am suggesting that all of these are significant objects. On one hand, the tableware essential to the rituals of daily living we share at home, on the other, communion vessels and reliquaries are used to deepen a spiritual ritual shared by a community. Both rituals are important experiences worthy of introspection, and consideration.
This is why I make pottery. I believe that handmade objects …
Maladaptive, Megan Thomas
Maladaptive, Megan Thomas
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
This ceramics MFA thesis presents themes of environmental and emotional transition through metaphorical bird imagery. The artist juxtaposes humans and ravens, who are capable of adapting to changing environments, with songbirds, who are less capable of surviving change. The artist asks viewers to consider the loss of ways of existing in the world that goes hand in hand with loss of biodiversity. Works include sculpture, sculptural and functional vessels, and drawings.
Waiting Room, Adam Lefebvre
Waiting Room, Adam Lefebvre
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
Waiting can be exasperating, but sometimes that helplessness, knowing there is nothing to do but wait, is a comfort.
I have come to understand the value of the handmade through using and living with thoughtfully crafted objects. I am attracted to goods made by people who give voice to their material. When this is done well, I slow down and pay more attention to the object and the task they are performing.
Attraction and distraction. What are the differences between objects meant to attract our attention and those meant to distract? I would much rather lead a life full …
Finding Balance, Quinn Maher
Finding Balance, Quinn Maher
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
Exhibition Statement
Finding Balance is my exploration into the relationship between form, firing, and utility.
In the studio I pay close attention the silhouette of each piece, looking for strong continuous lines in both the positive and negative space accentuating the volume created on the potter’s wheel. I spend time with each piece combing the surface to create texture and reveal the course particles below the surface. As I apply white slip to this textures surface, the high points allow the fluid slip to break and pool in recessed areas creating a layer of depth and variety. The white slip …
Wonder, Katriona Drijber
Wonder, Katriona Drijber
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
WONDER is an exploration of the point at which what we know and what we think we know begins to break down. I melt and erode the perfect patterns I worked hard to construct through the manipulation of kiln atmosphere, using excess carbon, wood, and soda ash. I then add ephemeral, delicate imagery of animals in china paint. These steps introduce elements of the unknown and unpredictable onto intimate objects at the core of domestic human life. By disrupting organized patterns and reintroducing the animals we share the world with, I explore the question: What is lost when we surround …
Luminous, Antra Sinha
Luminous, Antra Sinha
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
As an observer, I have enjoyed the momentary happenings of the world. In India, I have watched shimmering waves from the shores of the Bay of Bengal. In Utah, I have admired gleaming sunlight on freshly fallen snow on the mountains. Peering into the kiln at peak temperature I have been in awe of the bright white light. Close to my heart I hold the significant memory of my dog’s passing, who laid in my lap as the ball of light escaped her. I gather these fleeting moments, and carry them into my studio. I relive these happenings in my …
Anticipation Of Subsequent Days, Christopher Watt
Anticipation Of Subsequent Days, Christopher Watt
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
This thesis exhibition is a presentation of my research into historic and autoethnographic analyses of social, material, and technical practices that support the production of atmospheric-fired stoneware and porcelain vessels. My work examines contemporary ceramic processes of wood-firing, salt-glazing and wood ash glazes and how they continue craft practices of historic traditions.
By critically examining the ceramic studio as a ground for material and ethnographic research, I aim to better understand the social conditions that support and produce atmospheric-fired ceramic practices in the 21st century, as well as how and why we continue to create such pots. My practice-based research …
Point Of Inflection, Jonathan D. Stein
Point Of Inflection, Jonathan D. Stein
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
Images of Soda Fired Clay
Iteration, Nick Lammay
Iteration, Nick Lammay
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
Ceramic Iterations
Pyrosynthesis, Matthew Allen Fiske
Pyrosynthesis, Matthew Allen Fiske
All Graduate Plan B and other Reports, Spring 1920 to Spring 2023
Daily life plays an important role in what I make and why. The needs of the kitchen and home are for me, like many potters, a useful starting point for conceiving specific utilitarian forms. I make a lot of cups, bottles, and drinking vessels. Lately I’ve been interested in the idea of designing and making these vessels in sets. For me, there’s nothing better than gathering with a group of friends, eating, drinking, and using handmade ceramics. I’m motivated to make objects that enhance these experiences and enliven domestic spaces.