Pottery
Pottery is a form of ceramics technology, where wet clays are shaped and then dried or fired to harden them. The term is generally used only for relatively easily constructed utensils such as pots, cups, bowls, etc., and for decorative items but not for complex ceramics like Space Shuttle tiles. Pottery is an ancient technology.A person who makes pottery is generally known as a potter.
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2 Production stages 3 History 4 See also |
Handwork methods are the most primitive and individual techniques, where pieces are constructed from hand-rolled coils, slabs, ropes and balls of clay, often joined with a liquid clay slurry. No two pieces of handwork will be exactly the same, so it is not suitable for making matched sets of items eg.dinnerware. Doing handwork enables the potter to use their imagination to create one-of-a-kind works of art.
The potter's wheel can be used for mass production, although often it is employed to make individual pieces. A ball of clay is placed in the center of a turntable, called the wheel head, which is turned chiefly using foot power (a kick wheel or treadle wheel) or a variable speed electric motor. The wheel revolves rapidly while the clay is pressed, squeezed and pulled gently into shape. Wheel work takes a lot of technical ability, but a skilled potter can produce many virtually identical plates, vases or bowls in a day. Because of its nature, wheel work can only be used to initially create items with radial symmetry on a vertical axis. These pieces can then be altered by impressing, bulging, carving, fluting, faceting, slicing, and other methods to make them more visually interesting. Often, thrown pieces are further modified by having handles, lids, feet, spouts, and other functional aspects added using the techniques of handworking. There are two related techniques that improve repeatability of wheelwork. A jigger is a mould that is slowly brought down onto the outside of an object, whilst it is being turned on a wheel. A solid mould is used to form the inside of the piece. Similarly, a jogger is used to shape the inside of a piece, pressing the outside against a solid mould.
Slipcasting is probably the easiest technique for mass-production. A liquid clay slip is poured into plaster moulds and allowed to harden slightly. Once the plaster has absorbed most of the liquid from the outside layer of clay the remaining slip is poured back into the storage tub, and the item is left to dry. Finally the finished item is removed from the mould, trimmed neatly and allowed to air-dry.
Clay additives can be used to give color to the clay, prior to working. Various coarse additives can also be added. Sands and other grogs give the final product texture, and contrasting colored clays and grogs result in patterns. Combustible particles can be mixed with clay or pressed into the surface, to give textures.
Agateware refers to techniques that give a mixture of coloured clays. The name is derived from agates, which show band of colours, although it can be made with any sort of clay. Two different colours of clay are lightly kneaded together, before being formed into a shape. Although, in principle, any clays can be used, differing rates of drying and expansion in firing mean that it is usual to use a light colourless clay, and add a colourant to part of it. An analog of marquetry can also be made, by pressing small blocks of coloured clays together.
Burnishing, like the metalwork technique of the same name, involves rubbing the surface of the piece with a polished surface (typically steel or stone), to smooth and polish the clay. Finer clays give a smoother and shinier surface than coarser clays, as will allowing the pot to dry more before burnishing, although that risks breakages.
To give a finer surface, or a coloured surface, a thin slurry of clay called slip can be coated on to the dry clay. This can be painted with, or the piece can be dipped for a uniform coating. Sgraffito involves scratching through a layer of coloured slip to reveal a different colour underneath. One colour of slip can be fired, before a second is applied prior to scratching, if the base clay is not of the desired colour or texture.
Glazing is the process of coating the piece with a thin layer of a glassy material. This is important for functional earthenware vessels, which would otherwise be unsuitable for holding liquids due to porosity. Glaze may be applied by dusting it over the clay, or dipping or brushing on a thin slurry of glaze and water. Brushing tends not to give very even covering, but can be effective with a second coating of a coloured glaze as a decorative technique. With all glazed items, a small part of the item (usually on the base of the piece) must be left unglazed, else it will stick to the kiln during firing.
In Palestine, the earliest finds date from Neolithic times, around the 8th millennium BC, when the art of pottery was introduced into the region ? probably from the north, together with the agriculture. See full article history of pottery in Palestine.
Techniques
Forming Techniques
There are three basic categories of forming techniques used in pottery - handwork, wheelwork, and slipcasting. It's very common for wheelworked pieces to be finished by handwork techniques. Slipcast pieces tend not to be, as that negates one of the prime advantages of casting.Decorative and finishing techniques
Production stages
All pottery items go through a series of stages during construction.History
Palaeolithic Pottery
Pottery found in the Japanese islands has been dated, by uncalibrated radiocarbon dating, to around the 11th millennium BC, in the Japanese Palaeolithic at the beginning of the Jomon period. This is the oldest known pottery.
In Europe, burnt clay was already known in the late Palaeolithic (Magdalenian) and was used for female figurines, like the "Venus" of Dolni Vestonice.Neolithic pottery
See also