Sunday 28 February 2010

Writings...

I had to take a week out of our new 'Indulgence' project to write a critical review of sources. So reading week was actually spent reading rather than catching up on previous projects as it normally is. So after a week of camping out at Glasgow uni library and feeling very much like the quintessential 'proper student' I handed in all 3356 words to find I only really needed to write around 1500... Oh well.
With the substantial number of publications on craft theory over the past few years I selected a few examples of British and American writing and compared them to previous texts. I divide between American and British views quickly became distinct. Where British writers tend to move away from the craft/art divide, arguing that it does exist, and it this very divide that is crafts most interesting feature, many American publications argue the Craft is Art opinion. I have reviewed Howard Risatti -A theory of craft: function and aesthetic expression, Rose Slyka - The New Ceramic Presence, David Pye - The Nature and Art of Workmanship, Glenn Adamson -Thinking Through Craft and Richard Sennett - The Craftsman.

I am aware that I am being very atlantic-centric (if that's even a phrase) I my choice and would LOVE some reccommendations on anything else you think I should be reading.

I will post the final draft soon.

Adamson, Glenn Thinking Through Craft, Berg Publishing, London, 2007.
Adamson, Glenn (ed) The Craft Reader, Berg Publishing London, 2010.
Adolfy, Sandra - Neo Craft; Modernity and the Crafts, Press of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, 2009).

Kant, Immanuel: Analytic of the Beautiful - Critique of Judgement, Hafner publishing, New York 1951.

Pye, David The Nature and Art of Workmanship, Herbert Press Ltd, 2007. (first published 1968)
Risatti, Howard, A Theory of Craft: function and aesthetic expression, University of North Carolina Press, 2007.
Sennett, Richard The Craftsman, London Penguin, 2008

Tuesday 9 February 2010

building


teapot making 2
Originally uploaded by Shin shoe

research


research
Originally uploaded by Shin shoe

SDC10587


SDC10587
Originally uploaded by Shin shoe
paper wrapped around positive form for mould

paper cup


SDC10564
Originally uploaded by Shin shoe

press moulded in paper


SDC10568
Originally uploaded by Shin shoe

paster in paper


SDC10574
Originally uploaded by Shin shoe

in the making

Some photos from the development of the teapot. So far they have all cracked during firing (think the bisque never reached temperature) so ill hopefully have a lovely glazed one up soon- or I could just photoshop a cracked one but that would me cheating, and I hate photoshop.