Google "List of ceramic artists"
Find an artist you like.
Describe why you like them in terms of form, shape, color, texture, unity and MEANING
Describe what their artwork is about.
1/2 page typed.
Friday, March 15, 2013
Friday, March 1, 2013
Historical Sculpture Remix Project
Historical Sculpture Remix Project Requirements
Research Paper:
You must research a sculpture that is more than 100 years old.
Select a sculpture that can be recreated in clay and can stand upright on it’s own.
The sculpture must be fully 3D and appear different from any angle.
Create a typed 1 page research paper:
Describe the culture where this sculpture comes from.
Why was this sculpture created? What did it mean to the artist or people that made it?
Imagine that the sculpture was created in the present day- explain how it could be different. How would you remix it?
Why did you choose this sculpture?
Use proper spelling and grammar.
Cite sources that you get your information from.
1 Page typed
Double spaced
Include a printed map with a star indicating where this sculpture came from. (this does not count as part of your 1 page).
Include a printed picture of the original sculpture.
Sculpture:
Recreate the sculpture you have researched:
Sculpture:
Recreate the sculpture you have researched:
Create it fully 3D - do not ignore the back side or simply make it flat.
Score and slip pieces together.
Include texture where appropriate.
Burnish areas when necessary.
Piece must be over 8 inches tall.
Make sure large areas are hollow.
Add or change parts of the sculpture that will make your audience know that it is from the 21st century.
Here is a list of areas/cultures/historical periods to search through during your research:
Score and slip pieces together.
Include texture where appropriate.
Burnish areas when necessary.
Piece must be over 8 inches tall.
Make sure large areas are hollow.
Add or change parts of the sculpture that will make your audience know that it is from the 21st century.
Here is a list of areas/cultures/historical periods to search through during your research:
Ming Dynasty
Nok People Archaic Period Ancient Greece Ancient Rome Bambara Dogon Egypt Jin Dynasty Liao Dynasty Wei Dynasty |
Colima
Equador Columbia Peru Mesopotamia Aztec Kofun Han Dynasty Qin Dynasty |
Monday, February 25, 2013
Clay Vocabulary
There will be an upcoming quiz over the following terms:
Slip – A mixture of mostly water and clay.
Plastic Stage – When clay is very soft and stretches without
cracking.
Leatherhard Stage – The best stage to attach pieces of clay
together- the clay is firm, but carvable.
Greenware Stage – Also known as “bone-dry”; clay cannot be
worked at this point.
Bisqueware – clay has been fired once. It has been
permanently changed and cannot be reclaimed. This stage is when you apply
glaze.
Glazeware – After the clay has been fired the second time
and the glaze has turned to a finish.
Glaze – This is applied to a piece of bisqueware and then
fired to create a glossy or smooth surface to a ceramic piece.
Kiln – A piece of equipment that is used to heat clay to a
high temperature; the clay becomes very strong and permanently changed from the
heat.
Wedging – similar to kneading dough; this process works out
air bubbles and creates a consistent clay body. It can also be used to remove
excess moisture from clay.
Scoring/Slipping – This technique is used to attach two
pieces of clay together. First you scratch each piece of clay where they will
connect, then you apply this liquid clay solution to ensure the pieces stay
together.
Coil method– A way of handbuilding that involves rolling out
thin long pieces of clay and spiraling them up to form a vessel.
Pinch method – a way of handbuilding that involves gently
and continuously pressing your thumb on the inside of a ball of clay with your
fingers cupped around the outside.
Slab method- a method of handbuilding that can be done with
a rolling pin; you roll out thin sheets of
clay and cut them into sections to create sections of the vessel.
Potters Wheel – a device used to create clay pots that can
spin at very high speeds.
Bat – A wooden or plastic disc or square that clay is placed
on while working on a project.
Reclaim – the process of taking unwanted greenware, slip, and
very dry clay and returning it to a consistent plastic stage clay body.
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Fable Research
1. Choose a fable with a moral that is personally meaningful to you from www.aesopfables.com
- Or a fairey tale, or myth
- Offline sources (books) are okay – especially if the computers don’t work
- Several sentences is fine.
- Or… write your own fable that uses the same moral…
- Your fable should be ½ - 1 page in length
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