| | My
ceramic work is wheel thrown and altered using stoneware and porcelain clays.
Forms seek to utilise and respond to the malleability of the material and work
is altered and assembled while still wet. Current work includes bottles, jugs,
vases, platters and bowls. The work is wood fired to 1400 degrees centigrade
in an anagama kiln, for three to five days. There is no wall separating the fire
from the work and through the duration of the firing ash from the fire lands on
the pots and at top temperature this ash melts to form a natural ash glaze. Only
a small proportion of my work is conventionally glazed with glazes modified again
to respond to the atmosphere within the firing chamber. The majority of work relies
on the interaction between ash, clay and fire. The stoneware clays and porcelains
that I use have been developed to take advantage of the duration and the heat
of the firings, they respond to the flame and the atmospheres generated within
the kiln. The final pieces are a record of the passage of fire. | |