Thursday, May 19, 2011

The Life of Ceramics, Chapter Two: Preparing for an Historical Show.

                            Ceramic Vase inspired by Cycladic art, designed by Weston Neil Andersen
(designed sometime round about the 1980's)

Spring 2011 in Maine is cool and sunny with enough rainy days to keep the lawns green and the blossoms blossoming..

At Andersen Studio , we are pulling out the boxes of historical ceramics in preparation for the show at Studio 53 in downtown Boothbay Harbor, opening on May 25th. The work is very delicate and the glazes quite different from what we currently use. There are beautifully cast ceramic forms with double dipped glazes producing an interesting effect.


Pictured above are a pitcher, a vase with a downward sloping lip that can also function as a spout and the large size cruet or small wine decanter. All from the late forties or early fifties.

In contemporary times, creativity and innovation are frequently spoken about as the territory of new technology, leading some to view the world of studio potteries as a cult, albeit an ancient, classic and timeless one. Those who live the life of ceramics do with a personal passion for the process and the art. In the world of ceramics, Andersen Studio-Andersen Design is recognized for its designs and  history . The works which will be presented for the first time in this landmark show at Studio 53 in the picturesque village of Boothbay Harbor have a rarefied value within historical context.
                        
This form is based on the wine decanter.
The lip has been modified so that it
slopes downward and functions as a spout.
The form is dipped in two different glazes
to a very interesting effect.
          
As many of our personal collectors testify, Andersen Studio has a strong personal and cultural identity. Past enthusiasts rediscover Andersen Studio as an a intimate connection to their own personal mythology and as a cultural icon with the power to evoke memories of long ago times.

When Weston and Brenda Andersen began their career in the environs of New York City , they were part of a young designers movement that included Eva Zeisel, Weston's instructor and colleague, and Russel Wright, who twice invited Weston to apprentice. Then the youthful Andersen's art and design was focused on the functional form. When the Andersens moved to Maine, the natural coastal environment inspired the wild life series of sculptures. Ever since the Andersen's ceramic functional designs and stoneware nature art has been associated with life on the Maine coast.


Brenda Andersen was Weston's artistic partner,contributing sculptures and expressive decoration to the line. Brenda developed many repeatable patterns and she also manifested one of a kind spontaneous art work such as the platter shown above with its rigorous brushwork in the form of a tree.

Many of the ceramics in the up coming show are being displayed to the public for the very first time in over half a century- in the community that started the grass roots Andersen collectibles movement.


See links to other historical publications on Andersen Studio

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Ceramic Life- Chapter One- Producing a Slip-cast Mug.


Weston Neil Andersen
Founder of Andersen Studio- Andersen Design



My father, Weston Neil Andersen, fell on the pavement last April and suffered a serious brain injury, from which he is still recovering. He says in a considered tone that they tell him he is 89 years old but he isn't sure that he really believes this. Neither age nor brain injury is a cause for my father to retire, and so I like to tell him, that Eva Zeisel, his instructor and colleague is now 104 years old.

We always serve Weston's coffee in one of the mugs that he designed and Andersen Studio produces. Dad often holds the mug out at arms lengths and with a sly smile he says "Now that guy is a good designer!".

Recently a couple of our favorite mugs were broken and so I decided to cast some new ones, as I too missed having my morning coffee in my favorite mugs. I thought of the pleasure Dad would take in drinking his coffee in a brand new mug.



Three mugs in the fettled green ware state
copyright Weston Neil  Andersen 1989
 



As I was casting and fettling the new mugs I recalled that shortly before father fell that he spoke of an idea of doing a brochure of just the mugs and using it to market the mugs as a line onto themselves. I thought about how post-injury, Dad is trying to find a way to engage in the business but his language skills do not always meet the ideas he has floating around his head. It was then I decided to follow through on the idea Weston had been engaged in before he took a spill that led him to Maine Medical and then to the rehab center.


Weston Neil Andersen designed a beautiful series of mugs, which has never been made available to the market beyond our retail shop in East Boothbay, Maine. The design of the mugs are not suited to the "cookie cutter " presses used to manufacture mugs in China and other low labor cost countries. These are designs specifically suited to the handcrafted ceramic slip-casting method.

The slip-casting process begins with testing the liquid slip for it's water content using a measuring flask and a gram scale.The ideal measurement is around 176 -180. The liquid slip has to be of a consistency to easily and smoothly flow into and out of the mold's forms. If the slip has the right amount of water but is still too thick to flow easily in and out of the mold, the viscosity must be adjusted by adding a small amount of Darvan.

Once assured that the slip's viscosity is right, it is a wise idea to pour a test cast for twenty or thirty minutes to see the thickness that is produced after the liquid slip is pour out of the object. We find that our cobble makes a perfect testing form as it is an open form that will readily release moisture. After the piece is poured and dumped, one waits until it has dried enough to maintain its form, then one takes a flexible fettling knife that can easily be bent to accommodate any shape, and runs the bent knife along the upper edge of the mold leaving as little excess along the lip as possible. If the thickness looks good then one proceeds to fill the molds.

    
 Tea Cup with curving lip in green ware state after being fettled.
Copyright 1989 by Weston Neil Andersen

With Mugs I like to have a thin lip but not too thin as then the finished mug will easily chip. Sometimes one can take the green ware and even out the edge of the lip on a slab of marble with water poured over it, but as I was working on one of Dad's designs, what we call the Tea Cup, I noticed that the form is not intended to have a flat rim but that there is a quite graceful and subtle oval dip in the lip on the side of the cup used for drinking. This form has not been cast very often and it appeared that this pleasing detail was sometimes missed by the fettler.

Ideally the exact detail can be achieved by the slicing process that is applied to remove the extra clay from the mold defining the form of the lip. Sometimes, this may need a little adjustment. I have found that a fresh rolled piece of sandpaper is ideal for gently recreating the curve of the rim.

It is easy to break pieces during the fettling process, particularly if they have taken in moisture while working on them. A good fettler must have an awareness of when the form has reached that point of moisture when just holding the form with a slight amount of pressure can cause it to break in one's hands. The fettler must then have the wisdom to set the form aside to allow the moisture to release before finishing the piece

The curves in Weston's mug designs are beautiful and provide great satisfaction for the fettler who removes all the excess clay and mold marks to highlight the beauty of the form.


5 mugs in the fettled green ware state.
copyrighted by Weston Neil Andersen circa 1989

 

Once one has developed a familiarity with the form and what is needed to highlight the quality of the form, the next challenge for a production fettler  is to develop methods of achieving the quality in the shortest amount of time. This also involves an awareness of how far to go with the detail in the green ware and when it becomes futile because some details will be taken care of in the glazing process. A ceramic production requires synchronized team work. Each stage of the process affects and is affected by a later or earlier stages in the process.

2 mugs in  fettled greenware state.
Copyright Weston Neil Andersen circa 1989



Next - Decorating and Glazing the mugs after Bisque Firing 

This is an ideal project fpr collaboration with a ceramic slip-casting operation. See Andersen Studio's Vison statement.

Photography by Susan Mackenzie Andersen

Thursday, January 6, 2011

The Art Of Ceramics : Chapter One: What is Art?


In commencing to write about the art of Ceramics, the question presents itself: What is art?

Art is more than technique and greater than discipline. The social status of work of art is determined by political and cultural forces and at the same time art is nature expressed through the individual man in the context of time, place, culture and politics.

Art is more than aesthetics; it also conveys meaning and messages. Prior to the invention of the printing press painting, pottery, and architecture recorded the stories of history. In modern times art has become inseparable from a continual redefinition of art. Artists make “statements”, artists “shock”, artists express spiritual, religious, intellectual and political ideas.

At the beginning of the history, preferences for unique ceramic shapes and decorative styles emerged within specific cultures and time periods for which there is no other explanation that pure aesthetics. By definition, the function of a pot is filled by any shape that can serve as a small container, beyond that, the choice of the shape and the decoration are purely aesthetic choices- unless they are also created to serve social, political and/or religious purposes.

In the Neolithic era pottery served a function in material subsistence. Raw clay from the earth was used to make baskets air and watertight. When it was discovered that the heat permanently hardened the clay, the art of ceramics was born.

The word “art” can be used in relation to any human activity requiring the development of refined skills and disciplines, which traces back to the etymology of the word, art”. The Latin meaning of “art” translates as "skill" or "craft."

As long as the making of pottery was considered part of the household chores, it was a women’s art. When the market place came into existence, and more importantly the wheel, - one of man’s first “machines”- pottery making became a masculine pursuit. Man was the “provider”, and woman, who gives birth to new generations, historically took care of the home.

As the market evolved, it came to be that the creators of the form and the decorators of the pottery signed their work and so from the beginning of man’s history, the concept of “art” as something above and beyond mere function has evolved as a by-product of the market place. One could provide more for one’s family by offering that which satisfies more than material function and appeals to man’s need for beauty. Aesthetics was likely as much a part of pottery produced by women in the process of doing the household chores, just as the manifestation of beauty is as natural to man as it is to nature, but it was the marketplace that brought a wider appreciation in which the linguistic construct of “art” as separate from mere “function” was culturally articulated.

Art has long been associated with class distinctions. “Blue chip art” is beyond the reach of the ordinary person, and often synonymous with “important art”. It is a symbol of social status for the rarified private collector. “Fine art” is traditionally identified as art for arts sake and by definition excludes art that has a functional purpose. Dictionary .com defines
“Fine art” as "a visual art considered to have been created primarily for aesthetic purposes and judged for its beauty and meaningfulness, specifically, painting, sculptures, drawing, watercolor, graphics, and architecture.”

The inclusion of architecture in the above definition is incongruous. A building has an obvious and primary functional purpose and yet architecture is included in the above contemporary definition of ”fine art”, where as ceramics and other functional objects are excluded. A possible conclusion is that the inclusion of architecture is explained by the larger degree of concentrated wealth involved in creating a larger functional object such as a building. I submit that this is a bad definition of both fine art and design - as if aesthetics is the primary purpose for creating a building and function merely a tangential happenstance or after thought of the aesthetic purpose, in direct denial of the foundational tenant of good design;” Form follows function”.


The power elite are the arbitrators of a society’s “important art”.  Important art is exhibited in high-end galleries and museums. While the power elite may dismiss art produced for middle class or mass markets, the general public often looks aghast at what is presented as art by the power elite, be it Jeff Koon’s 1991  “Made in Heaven” show at the Sonnabend Gallery in Soho, New York City- a show of oversized images of Koons and his then wife, a porn star, in the act of having sex- or the 2010 federally funded Smithsonian Gallery show featuring ““images of an ant-covered Jesus, male genitals, naked brothers kissing, men in chains, Ellen Degeneras grabbing her breasts and a painting the Smithsonian itself describes in the show‘s catalog as ’homoerotic.’ –all in a show that the museum describes as “the first major exhibition to examine the influence of gay and lesbian artists in creating modern American portraiture.” It is arguable that the show is functionally motivated - all be it a political function. Thus in accordance with the dictionary.com definition of fine art, The Smithsonian’s gallery show is no more classifiable as “fine art” than beautiful pottery “artifacts” found in ancient graves.

It is quite possible to apply the design axiom “Form follows function” to every work of art invoking some interesting results. Form can follow from a spiritual, intellectual, political, or practical function. All of the arts are expressed through some manner of form. “Art” is an elusive quality not easily defined, always reinventing itself anew.

The dictionary.com definition exposes the meaning of  “fine art” as a man-made linguistic construct inseparably entwined with class distinctions, wealth, and power. It begs the question: “If “fine art” needs to be separated and exclusive of any functional purpose, then why isn’t it also separated and exclusive of social and political purposes such as concentrated wealth, politics and/or religion? What makes art “important” what makes art “fine” What makes art “art”?

I submit that “art” by nature is self-evident. It exists in the eye of the beholder. Art exists in any object that evokes an elevated response from the viewer. If art is defined as that which evokes the emotions, the intellect, or the spirit of man, then it makes no difference whether the work of art is created with gold, silver and rare gems, or from the ubiquitously available clay or wood, or if it is commonly available or only to be had by a rarified elite.



When a collector brings together a group of objects, he creates value. The collector’s eye creates the value.


While there is no escaping the function of art as a maker of status, and the collecting of art as inescapably entwined with the creation of wealth,

A function of making art is that it promotes well-being through meaningful work processes, and so while the art may be owned by a wealthy elite, the function of creating the art serves the larger society.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

The Science Of Ceramics - Chapter One. Great Ball of Fire

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Earth_Western_Hemisphere.jpg

I am second generation in a ceramic art and design businesses, which many of you may know, goes by the names of Andersen Studio and Andersen Design, our production and wholesale S corporation.

I learned ceramics from my father, Weston Neil Andersen, who learned techniques of  production ceramics from Eva Zeisel as part of the industrial design course he was enrolled in at Pratt Institute. It was a landmark course teaching ceramics as a slip-casting process rather than the wheel thrown technique still today commonly associated with the making of ceramics. The purpose of the course was to educate the designer about industry production processes. The primary source of my father’s knowledge of the molecular processes of ceramics are the books that have long been in our bookcases. From these books, my father taught himself how to design the original glazes that are a signature of Andersen Studio Stoneware.

I grew up in an environment in which the ceramic workshop and retail showroom were inseparably connected to the home, somewhat like the chicken farm in which my father was raised. The process of ceramics was both the background and foreground of our family life. Whenever we had a problem to solve in one of the slips or glazes that we make from raw materials, dad would always talk about the crystal interactions, the suspension of the molecules, what happens during the heating process, viscosity, deflocculating, and other scientific terms and concepts. These were processes, which are taking place at a scale that is not visible to the unaided human eye.

Later I became interested in processes taking place at an even smaller molecular scale, that scale which physicists refer to as the quantum level of accuracy, where in nature follows radically different laws than those that govern within the scale of “the classical limit”. Contemporary science of ceramics has evolved within the classical limit, but in its very beginnings ceramics was an intuitive process. The atomic theory of on the nature did not enter the scientific mainstream until the early 19th century. Perhaps at a future date, ceramic understanding will incorporate the mysterious events taking place with in the quantum domain. Currently, about a century after the discovery of Planck’s constant, there still exists a gulf between scientific worldviews based in the description of nature within the classical domain and that at the quantum scale. I expect to be primarily focused within the classical limit in this discussion.

Ceramics involves molecular interactions that occur during the heating and cooling of matter. Whether one believes that the earth began as a cloud of white hot gases spun off from a Sun, or an accumulation of dust particles that became heated through the constant addition of new layers, it is generally accepted that at one time the earth was very hot. The raw materials used in ceramics came into being during the cooling down process of the white-hot earth.

The earth has a radius of 4000 miles but most of the minerals that man uses are within the first ten or so miles that make up the crust. The original crust consisted mainly of basalt, a very hard rock with a glassy crystalline structure, testifing that at one time it cooled very quickly. Basalt is made up of fluxes (calcium oxide, lime and magnesium oxide), alumina, and silica.

Likely, even before the earth’s cooling process was complete, the crust was affected by physical and chemical forces. The cooling process must have produced clouds of gases, which condensed into water and acids. The grinding and pounding of the water loosened particles of rock, which then became abrasives, which further attacked the earth’s outer balsam crust.

The process produced a fine sediment, which was more vulnerable to chemical reactions than the balsam crust. The result was the introduction of separate minerals. Calcium oxide (lime) was leached out by acid solutions and turned into calcium carbonate (lime stone). Silica and alumina floated freely about or combined with water to form clay. The newly formed minerals had different weights, which the currents of water picked up, sorted according to weight, and then deposited, in different locations around the globe.

 Layers of different sediments formed at different locations on the earth. The weight of the layers created pressure on underlying layers causing further changes. Clays became rocks; silica and quartz became sandstone and limestone metamorphasized into marble.

As the earth continued to cool, it shrank and the hard rock crust became wrinkled and cracked. The sedimentary layers fell into the cracks and valleys and became thicker, harder and more complex deposits.

Volcanoes of inconceivable magnitude erupted. A sea of Granite poured out and filled the spaces between the basalt and layers of sediment. The basalt slowed the cooling process of the granite creating larger and less glassy crystals. Huge pieces of granite floated on the surface of the basalt and lifted continents of sediment above the water level. The continents shifted and bumped into one another causing great masses to pile up which today are known as the Alps and the Himalayas.

As the granite was exposed to the physical and chemical forces it was redistributed in huge quantities around the earth. The mystery of life emerged from primitive cells and found nourishment in the sediment and the atmosphere only to be buried under layers of new rocks to become fossils.

And so on and on goes the creative process of nature.

Silica and alumina are one of the most common substances on earth. Silica constitutes approximately 60% of the earth’s weight and alumina constitutes another 18%. Fourteen elements constitute 99.224% of the bulk of earths crust, of these 11 are used in pottery, composing 99.169% of the earth crust. All of the basic raw materials used in ceramics are found in the United States (and other parts of the world). These raw materials are China Clay, Felspar, Nepheline Syenite, Alkai salts, Nitrates, Borates, Lead and Zinc.

More about these materials in my next post.

For those interested in reading directly from one of my sources of inspiration for this post, I recommend Pottery Glazes by David Green


Free shipping on quality books

Monday, November 29, 2010

The History of Ceramics - Chapter One


Ancient Indian Coiled Pottery Pot 
from The Mid-Western United States
Photo courtesy of Barnhill Indian Trader

The beginnings of human history are cloaked in mystery, but as speculation goes, Ceramics emerged around 8000 BC during the Neolithic Revolution when man first started using tools and developing agricultural skills. This produced a need for vessels to carry and cook the produce.

There is one exception that calls for mentioning, Dolni Vestonice in the Czech Republic, where models of animals and a Venus figurine have been dated to about 25,000 years ago

The first vessels were baskets. The ubiquity of early coiled ceramic forms, from the Middle East to China to the America’s, suggests that pottery was first discovered when baskets were coated with clay so that they could hold small seeds and grain. Then one day the basket fell into the fire and it was discovered that heating hardens the clay making it more suitable as an airtight vessel. This event occurred synchronistically in different parts of the globe


Around 5000 BC it was discovered that by burnishing the half dry clay with a stone or a bone a smooth and more airtight surface could be created.


Ash firing was discovered when a pot was placed upside down on hot coals, reducing the surface of the rim to a glossy black. The upside down vase was also the first kiln. Then came the hole in the ground above which a bonfire was lit. Later the hole in the ground became a cave in a hill. The Chinese and Japanese expanded this into a complex system of successive chambers climbing over the slope of the hill

The kilns designed by the ancients are still in use today but have undergone modifications due to changes in fuel, materials, and the need for larger scale production. The greatest revolution in the technology of the kiln came with the discovery of electricity. The electric kiln simplified the process of firing as well as making it safer. This increased the popularity of the art of making the ceramics.

At first all pottery was made by women as part of the household chores, but as civilization developed, the “market” made its appearance and pottery became the work of the skilled craftsman. Around 3000 B.C, a simple revolving wheel existed in Mesopotamia, the area between the Tigris and the Euphrates Rivers The potter’s wheel economized the production of ceramics. By 4000 BC pottery making was predominantly masculine and the use of the potter’s wheel was commonplace.

The origins of mold making are traced back to Hellenistic Greece and the Roman Empire. This was a clay bowl with a design pressed into the inside. It was fired and then clay was hand pressed into the inside. A potter’s wheel was used to spin the surface until it was smooth. As it dried the clay reduced in size so that the “green” clay form was easily removed from the fired clay form.

Plaster, needed for molds used in ceramic slip casting dates 9000 years. The Romans cast in plaster to make copies of Greek sculptures and so it is much to my surprise to learn that the development of slip casting is credited to Ralph Daniel of Coolidge, Great Briton at the late date of 1743. I’ll be looking into this and reporting what I learn in future posts.

POST NOTE
During the process of researching this series I have been using both the Internet and my father’s old ceramics books, some of them dating to the days
in the 1940’s when Dad studied ceramic slip casting in the Industrial Design department at Pratt Institute . His instructor was none other than the illustrious Eva Zeisel. Eva was quite taken aback when dad told her that he was actually going to move to Maine and start a hands-on ceramic slip casting studio of his own. This is what brings the organic quality to my parent’s designs, distinguishing their work from their more famous mid-century contemporaries who primarily designed for large production companies.
 

I love the process of a small slip-casting studio and I have also been enjoying researching and writing about the History of Ceramics. I look forward to continuing this discussion of The History of Ceramics and will continue it on this blog, Talking About Ceramics.  

I hope you enjoyed reading this at least half as much as I am enjoying writing it.   

The next email in this introductory series will be The Science of Ceramics. I can’t wait to dig into more of my father’s old books.

You can sign up to receive this email series and other news of interest on Andersen Studio's Home Page. 

One of my favorite references for this article has been Ceramics- A Potters Handbook by Glenn C Nelson, 1971 

Check out Biblio Books for great prices.