Thursday, November 19, 2009

Michael Vick - Player of the Year






This is a Trophe sculpture, a cause for animals, that is based on the American football quarter back for the Philidelphia Eagles, in the National Football League, Michael Vick, who was recently arrested for participating in illegal dog fighting tournaments. This sculpture portrays the results of his actions. I modeled this entire piece from clay. I first started off by modeling all 4 limbs, the head and the body separetely. Once this was done, i cut all the parts in half to hollow them out, and joined them back together. I then joined the parts of the dog together and left it to get leather hard to carve the details of the dogs fur, the teeth, the cuts and stitches as well as Michael Vick's jersey and the shoulder pads. I then colored the fur of the dog with oxides, the jersey with a red under-glaze and the "blood" around the mouth with a cherry red under-glaze. I then hand coiled the podium on which the dog sits, Luted the dog to the podium and bisque fired the piece. The "block of wood" on which the dog on the podium sits, was slab-built into a cube of clay, which is hollow as well. The inside of this hollow block has 2 slabs of clay, which i joined in the form of a 90˚ angle cross and joined the edges of it to the inside walls, for support, to prevent distortion in the firing. I then left the block to dry past the leather hard stage and carved the detail of the wood onto the surface. After bisque firing, i rubbed Manganese dioxide and red iron oxide onto the surface to create the appearance of wood and fired it to 1060˚C to harden the oxides to the surface. The gold plate on the block of wood was measured and cut from a leather hard slab of clay. On either side of this plate are carved nails to indicate that they are holding the plate to the wood. I then carved out the writing, which says, "Michael Vick - Player of the year." Once his was done, i bisqued and glaze fired it to 1120˚C. I then applied a gold lustre to the surface and fired it to 750˚C. Gold also resembles first place. In Michael Vick's case, he has achieved a gold trophe for the abuse of animals, which is quite ironic. This sculpture is not to show that he is a victum, but the number one abuser of animals.

24 piece dinner set


In this work, are 24 pieces for a dinner set. This set consists of 6 square dinner plates, 6 semi-bowls with square rims, 6 bowls with square rims and 6 creme brule bowls with square rims. I began to throw the 6 bowls and the prototypes for the semi-bowls and the creme brule bowls. Once the thrown bowls were leather hard, i began to turn them, when this was done, i measured and cut the rims into squares. Once my prototypes were leather hard, i turned them into shape and made one piece moulds of them. I then slip cast 6 bowls from each mould and measured and cut the rims into squares. With regard to the square plates, i made a 40cm hump mould, rolled out 6 slabs of clay with a thickness of 0.5cm, pressed them onto the hump mould, centered it onto the wheel-head and threw the feet onto the surface. Once my plates were leather hard, i measured and cut them into squares that measure 27cm from rim to rim. After bisque firing all of my bowls and plates, i applied a white opaque glaze to the surface of each item and glaze fired them to 1100˚C. After glaze firing, i applied a poppy on-glaze color to the already fired glazed surface of each item and fired them to 750˚C.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Melting Bottles


I slip cast 4 of my ready-made Coke bottles and purposely distorted them as I took them out of the mould, i also left the joining seems unfettled or unfinished. After bisque, I took the same glaze that I used for my broken bowls and applied it to the surface of my bottles and fired it to 1100oC. These bottles may look and feel rough due to the fact that they are unfinished, but the green glaze and the melting effect give them their soft quality.

Broken bowls



 
In this work, I threw a lump of clay on the wheel, when it was leather hard, I turned it into a bowl form(solid upside down bowl or prototype) I then removed it from the wheel and made a one piece mould of it. When then mould was dry, I cast 3 bowls and broke it up while still bone dry. After bisque, I applied a peacock green strain to a white opaque glaze, applied it to the surface of my bowls and fired to 1100oC.


 

Crystalline vase

 

In this post, is a thrown vessel with the use of a crystalline glaze. To give this glaze it’s greenish background, I added Copper Oxide along with Nickel oxide. I then applied the glaze, piling it very thickly around the mouth and neck. I then fired it to a top temperature of 1255oC and cooled to 1100oC to achieve larger star-like crystals.

Thrown spiral pots



These pots were wheel thrown. They have a bulbous body that taper into a narrow neck. After bisque firing, I applied, more or less, an equal balance of  maroon and black that spiral upwards from the base of the body to the mouth, in between the maroon and black, the clay body is left unpainted, emphasizing it's natural color. I achieved the maroon color with the addition of red iron oxide and the black with the addition of manganese dioxide. Once my colors were painted on, I took my vases to a stoneware temperature of 1260oC.

Stenciled Bottles


Here I made use of  ready-made objects, which is a Coka-Cola bottle that I made a mould of and slip cast to stencil on my decorations. I took several sheets of transparency paper and cut out my images, applied them to the bisqued surface of my bottles and sponged black amako and fired them again to harden onto the surface. Once they came out of the kiln, I applied a transparent glaze and fired to 11000C. These bottles stand in a sequence and tell a story from the images. The story is based on the night of Claudio’s(my brother) murder.

Majolica wanna be



In this post is a platter with an abstract tree with earthy colors in the background, such as green, yellow and blue. It is wheel thrown and turned, with an even wall thickness. After bisque, I applied a transparent glaze and painted these decorations over the wet glaze. I then left my platter to stand over night to prevent crawling and fired it to 1100oC. The technique is the same as the Majolica technique, but using a transparent glaze.


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