Wednesday, 23 October 2013

And America Was Closed

I've been away on a well needed holiday. As you can tell from the title of this post, I've just been to the States during the government shutdown. This led to a couple of minor disappointments. Our raft trip down the Colorado River had to be cancelled as Grand Canyon National Park was shut. As were the other iconic national parks in the area which we were going to visit. Also, our planned day's walking in Yosemite had to be switched to Mammoth.

However, I'm not complaining for two reasons. The financial problems that this shutdown will have caused for a lot of low paid government employees is long term and damaging. Having to change travel plans is not. Once the shutdown happened, I got on the internet and checked out state parks. It didn't take me long to work out new and interesting places to visit. If the national parks hadn't been shut we wouldn't have visited Snow Canyon in Utah, or have discovered Sedona, Arizona, and its lovely state parks.

Here are some of my sketches from my trip...




On The Caltrain





Snow Canyon State Park, Utah





Red Rock State Park, Arizona





A Day Out In San Francisco





Waiting For A Seat At The Counter





The Terrace, Station House Cafe



The last sketch was done at lunch in Point Reyes Station, California, a lovely small town north of San Francisco. Looking around the main street, I found a craft shop selling some of the burnished pit fired ceramics that has been inspiring me recently. I resisted the urge to buy any, partly because it can be hard to transport ceramics intact. The main reason is that I'm trying to create work in a similar style, and my house is already filling up with my own experiments!

Wednesday, 18 September 2013

Fun With Fire

Spent the weekend up camping with friends at Hebden Bridge Camping. The trip was mainly about attempting to test latest theories of how Bronze Age pottery was made, although we managed to make it a party as well. The campsite is run by my sister, Georgina and her partner Phil. They very kindly allowed us to have our Bronze Age pottery experiment.

As no Bronze Age kilns have been discovered yet, the basic theory is that they made pots as part of the general household tasks and fired them in the round house hearth. This meant no extra fuel collecting, which was expensive in time and energy. For more details on the theories and processes check out Ceramicals blog.

With a weather forecast of autumn storms arriving on Sunday, we had to take the whole process through in one day. This meant there was a danger of exploding pots if we didn't dry them out well enough. In the end, we went from raw clay to fired pots in less than twelve hours. Happily there were hardly any breakages.



Clayworking Tools
















Working On The Pieces








Drying Them Out
















Stacking Pots In The Fire












Stoking Up




Blazing Merrily




Horse Sculpture First Out




The Ashes




Porridge Bowl




Teatime


As you can see from the pictures, although the resulting pots were fired at relative low temperatures, they are capable of holding food and drink. All in all a great success and a fun learning process.

Thanks go out to Georgina and Phil for providing the venue for our experiment, Rachel from Hive for coming up with the idea and Gill from Ceramical for writing it all up in a more technical way.

Monday, 19 August 2013

Life Can Get In The Way...

It has been a long time since my last post. Mostly family events like christenings, weddings and visits have been taking up a lot of my (not work) time. When the regularity of my creative work gets broken up in this way, it often takes me a while to get back on track.

Added to the life stuff is the fact that some of the projects I have been working on this summer were always going to take a while. I knew I wouldn't have anything to show for weeks, so I've been deliberately keeping it all in the background until I was ready. My regular drawing and sketching has taken a backseat during this period. I haven't stopped completely, and will post some of my sketches in my next post.

In previous posts I have shown some of the raku work that I have done in the past. I like this kind of experimental, relatively low tech ceramics work very much. I will be doing more raku in the future, but having read around the subject I discovered other processes that were more accessible to me. Narrowing it down to the work I really like and that didn't involve very toxic chemicals, it was obvious that both pit and barrel firing would produce interesting work. Since my back yard is brick paved, pit firing was out of the question.

My boyfriend is very good at sourcing useful items that are in need of recycling, and managed to reclaim a couple of small steel barrels (closer to buckets really) that were destined for the skip at work. So through most of the summer I've been working at HIVE to produce some simple coil built bowls that I have then burnished, and had bisque fired. During this time, I've learnt a lot about burnishing, partly from experience but also from a couple of very useful books (Low-firing and Burnishing, and Alternative Kilns & Firing Techniques). My preferred method at the moment is to put a lot of thin layers of white slip on to my finished bowl, allow it to dry to nearly bone dry and then burnish with the back of a spoon first, then finishing with a thin plastic bag.

This weekend I had a couple of bisque fired bowls, and good enough weather to do a test firing. I was concentrating so much on what I was doing I forgot to photograph the process. Next time!

I followed the packing of the barrel from the Alternative Kilns section on barrel firing, with a layer of sawdust sprinkled with table salt, the bowls with copper wire tied around them, some dried seaweed packed around, covered with straw and some more table salt, then another layer of sawdust, and finishing with a stack of wood and kindling on top.

As my barrel is so much smaller than the ones usually used, the whole process only took a couple of hours. I was too impatient to let it all cool slowly, but I may do in the future. But the results were better than I was expecting for a first attempt.

I took a few pictures as I was taking the bowls out to let them cool down, so you can see my barrel. During the firing I had it set up on the bricks, but had taken it off them so that I could put the cooling bowls there.




My Barrel, Leather Gloves And The Bowls




The Bowls Cooling




Close Up



After cooling, I cleaned the bowls and put a coat of furniture wax on to seal the surface. Then i took some photographs.



Barrel Fired Vessel




Different View




Smaller Vessel




View From The Other Side

Monday, 15 July 2013

An Unexamined Life...

This is going to have be a really quick post. Not only am I throwing it together in between jobs, I've only got a couple of sketches to put in. Now this isn't because I've been slacking on the creative front. Far from it, I've been doing as much as possible. But some of my efforts aren't particularly photogenic. I'm still working on my ceramics, which haven't reached a finished state yet. And I'm still working on my still life of draped cloth. Again, it's a long way off being finished.

On top of all this, I've been spending some of my time on family stuff, with more to come.

However, I have been trying some new techniques in my sketches...



An Elderly Couple in Costa Coffee




City Hall Clock, Bradford




Two Women in Centenary Square

Monday, 8 July 2013

A Creative Time

There aren't as many sketches this time. But it's not that I've been slacking. I'm working on a few different projects at the moment. I've been busy in the ceramics studio at HIVE, working on a long studio drawing, and at the beginning of a new textiles project. All of this as well as having a full day job schedule!

I will be posting photos of the new projects as they progress, but for now I'm sticking to sketches and life drawings...




Two Women at Costa Coffee




Quick Sketches From Costa


Sometimes I'm not good at picking people who are going to stay a long time in Costa Coffee. In both of the above spreads, I picked a winner on the lefthand side and barely got started on the right. I'm definitely better at getting the gesture down quickly, so at least I've got something to show for it.


 Waiting in the Car Park

On our way to a party, my boyfriend left me in the car while he bought supplies and birthday presents. I'd got as far as the car in front, and was about to start work on the background when he got back.


Life Drawing at The Saturday People












The session was two hours, and split into three shorter poses followed by one hour long pose. I've been practising get the gesture down in a minute or two, and then going back in to work on more details. The top drawing was a 6B graphite stick and the other two were done with a watersoluble 8B pencil.



Altar Rocks, St Ives, Bingley

We went out for a walk and a barbecue at Altar Rocks nearly Bingley. It was very quiet. I think everyone was staying in to watch the tennis. I knocked this sketch off while John did the cooking.

Wednesday, 26 June 2013

Time to Play

A very quick post of a couple of sketches that I made yesterday. Due to various work commitments I have a couple of hours to kill at a time when traffic makes it unfeasible to go home and come back out again. This means I have to find a good way to use this time. I've been making the most of the good weather to get outside to do more sketching. I've been playing with media I don't use very often (or is completely new to me), and subject matter that I'm not usually drawn to. Yesterday the subject was landscape, and I was using oil pastels (which I am enjoying playing with) and my fountain pen with Noodler's Bulletproof ink.

Here are the sketches...





A View From Cottingley




In Ink


Now I'm going to rush off to HIVE to work on some ceramics.

Monday, 24 June 2013

Recharging The Batteries

Just got back from a weekend away in Cumbria visiting friends. We stayed with friends who own a smallholding in Little Clifton, near the coast. The weather wasn't great, but we still got out and about.

On Saturday, we went into Whitehaven partly for the festival, but mainly to visit another friend who has just taken over management of a pub in the centre of town. It was the first time I'd been to Whitehaven. The town is a little shabby in places, but you can see how it must have been in its glory days during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It's full of lovely Georgian townhouses.

I managed to get a little sketching done in between all the socialising...




At The Snecklifter


Sitting in the pub, I started drawing this trio of lads opposite. Unfortunately, they left before I drew them all.




Whitehaven Skyline
(with added seagull!)


And finally, here is a small preview of my photos from Iceland...




Black Sands, South East Coast





Iceberg, Jokulsarlon





Geothermal Bubbling Mud, Lake Myvatn Area