Diving into the clay - By working in 3D, potters are automatically...

Diving into the clay RSS

Kelly Kessler

A blog of discovering clay. A chance to explore the philosophy and practicalities of twenty-first century pots. A collection of leads for my students and myself.



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Olive oil jug, 2011 - Kelly Kessler

Flower frog vase, 2011 - Kelly Kessler

Detail, lungs flask, 2011 - Kelly Kessler

Flower frog vase, 2011 - Kelly Kessler

Detail, olive oil jug, 2011 - Kelly Kessler

Olive oil jug, "Blossom", 2011 - Kelly Kessler

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By working in 3D, potters are automatically working with “space”. If you have yet to consider the ramifications of that enterprise, this offers a dizzying leap into some of the considerations. I would have dearly loved to have seen some of Matta-Clark’s building cuts in the flesh.
cinoh:

austereprint:

Splitting, 1974. Black and white photo collage by Gordon Matta-Clark

“I don’t know what the word “space” means…I keep using it. But I’m not quite sure what it means.” – Gordon Matta-Clark.
From 1971 until his death in 1978, the American artist Gordon  Matta-Clark produced a body of work popularly known the “building cuts”;  sculptural transformations of abandoned buildings paradoxically  constructed through the cutting and virtual dismantling of a given  architectural site. Situated in places ranging from slums in Manhattan  to the waterfront of Antwerp, these works, long since destroyed, appear  to comply with the most canonical assumptions of site-specific art in  the seventies. On the one hand they demonstrate the commonly accepted  notion that the place where the artwork is encountered necessarily  conditions its reception, foregrounding as they do the the localized  dynamics between institutions, property values and works of art. On the  other hand Matta-Clark’s cuttings address the temporality of the built  environment, marking the destruction of the buildings that effectively  constituted such places. To read the personal testimonials on Matta-Clark’s work is to sense the  experimental limitations of these models, for what marks these accounts  is a certain failure of description that attends to the dizzying, at  times overwhelming, experience of the building cuts; their unsettling  shifts in scale, their Piranesiesque irruptions into architectural mass,  their vertiginous drops and labyrinthine passages, their gaping holes,  each affording the most disorientating vistas.

(Via History of Our World)

By working in 3D, potters are automatically working with “space”. If you have yet to consider the ramifications of that enterprise, this offers a dizzying leap into some of the considerations. I would have dearly loved to have seen some of Matta-Clark’s building cuts in the flesh.

cinoh:

austereprint:

Splitting, 1974. Black and white photo collage by Gordon Matta-Clark

“I don’t know what the word “space” means…I keep using it. But I’m not quite sure what it means.” – Gordon Matta-Clark.

From 1971 until his death in 1978, the American artist Gordon Matta-Clark produced a body of work popularly known the “building cuts”; sculptural transformations of abandoned buildings paradoxically constructed through the cutting and virtual dismantling of a given architectural site. Situated in places ranging from slums in Manhattan to the waterfront of Antwerp, these works, long since destroyed, appear to comply with the most canonical assumptions of site-specific art in the seventies. On the one hand they demonstrate the commonly accepted notion that the place where the artwork is encountered necessarily conditions its reception, foregrounding as they do the the localized dynamics between institutions, property values and works of art. On the other hand Matta-Clark’s cuttings address the temporality of the built environment, marking the destruction of the buildings that effectively constituted such places.
To read the personal testimonials on Matta-Clark’s work is to sense the experimental limitations of these models, for what marks these accounts is a certain failure of description that attends to the dizzying, at times overwhelming, experience of the building cuts; their unsettling shifts in scale, their Piranesiesque irruptions into architectural mass, their vertiginous drops and labyrinthine passages, their gaping holes, each affording the most disorientating vistas.

(Via History of Our World)

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