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April 22, 2014

April 22, 2014. BR: What is clay? S:VAHSVAPR.4 Understands and applies media, techniques, and processes in three-dimensional art. EQ: What is ceramics?. April 23, 2014. BR: When Mrs. Brown gives you clay out of the bag, what stage is it in? S:VAHSVAPR.4 <same>

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April 22, 2014

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  1. April 22, 2014 BR: What is clay? S:VAHSVAPR.4 Understands and applies media, techniques, and processes in three-dimensional art. EQ: What is ceramics?

  2. April 23, 2014 BR: When Mrs. Brown gives you clay out of the bag, what stage is it in? S:VAHSVAPR.4 <same> EQ: What are the 6 Stages of Clay?

  3. April 24, 2014 BR: What is the FIRST THING you do once you have been given clay when working with it? (ALWAYS!) S:VAHSVAPR.4 <same> EQ: What are the 6 Steps of Using Clay? ***REMEMBER SKETCHBOOK CHECK TOMORROW!

  4. April 28, 2014 BR: What is the saying for applying two pieces of clay together? S:VAHSVAPR.4 <same> EQ: What is the process of scoringand slipping?

  5. April 29, 2014 BR: What is slip? S:VAHSVAPR.4 <same> EQ: Is clay an additive or subtractive process?

  6. April 30, 2014 BR: What are some ways to decorate clay? S:VAHSVAPR.4 <same> EQ: What is applique?

  7. May 5, 2014 BR: What is a firing cycle? What is the length of a firing cycle? S:VAHSVAPR.4 <same> EQ: What are the “wares” of clay?

  8. Comprehensive Art Mrs. Brown Introduction to Ceramics

  9. TODAY • Please follow along with the PowerPoint and fill in your Ceramic worksheet. • Daily grade given for being on task and participating; if you are off task/sleeping you will loose points and a possible detention. • You will be tested on this information and it will also be on the final exam.

  10. What is Clay? Clay is . . . . . .a fine mixture of decomposed igneous rock materials and organic matter. • Clay is continuously being formed.

  11. Over time, exposure to the elements cause the materials to break down into smaller and smaller pieces: Weathering Boulders Rocks Pebbles Fine grain = materials that make up clay.

  12. Weathering Processes:

  13. What is Ceramics? Objects made from any type of clay that is fired with the aid of heat

  14. History of Ceramics It is hypothesized that ceramics came about when humans 1st learned to control fire. Old methods and concepts are still used today.

  15. Historical Ceramic Origins • Anthropologists use Stone Age clues to piece together a variety of possible theories of ceramic’s origin

  16. Functional Purposes:Storage Vessel Examples • Greece 1600 B.C • Some jars as tall as 6 ft • Created using the coil method

  17. Communication & Documentation: Cuneiform Script • Early system of writing in Mesopotamia • Stylus pressed into clay tablets • Record-keeping of laws, historical events, & harvests

  18. Cylinder Seal Form of signature, or identification on important documents. Hunting Scene 2250-2150 BCE, Mesopotamia

  19. Spiritual & Religious Purposes: Pots were widely used as funerary objects in prehistoric burial grounds Contained food to accompany dead on journey to the afterlife Infants and small children Ceramic figurines and animals to protect the deceased.

  20. Terracotta Warriors • Form of funerary art - buried with the First Emperor of Qin (He was the first emperor of China in 221 BCE.) • Their purpose was to help him rule in the afterlife. • Architects are currently still excavating

  21. 6 Steps to Using Clay • Early Preparation (Levigation) • Forming Clay (5 major methods) • Drying Clay • Decorating Clay • Glazing • Firing These two stages (5 & 6) can happen in reverse order as well.

  22. Step 1: Early Clay Preparation • Early potters dug their raw material out of the ground, and it often contained impurities such as pebbles or plant matter. • To remove these, potters would dry the clay in the sun, crush it into smaller lumps, and pick out the unwanted material. • Then, they rehydrate the dry clay to make it workable. • This method was fine for making a few pots, but it was difficult and time-consuming. ** The clay that Mrs. Brown gives you has already been through this early clay preparation process.

  23. Modern Clay Preparation • Potters discovered it was much easier and faster to separate impurities by adding water to the clay and then pouring the liquid clay (slip) from one container to another. • This process is known as decanting. Decanting causes the coarser materials to settle on the bottom. • Another traditional method for removing impurities is known as Levigation.

  24. Step 2: Forming Clay The earliest and simplest methods are still used today. Four Basic Hand Building Techniques: • Pinch Method (oldest method) • Coil Method • Slab Method • Molding Method

  25. Hand Building: Process of forming pieces using hands without the use of a potter’s wheel; 30,000 years old.

  26. Pinch Method • Is when clay is pulled and pinched in order to shape an object with fingers. • It is the oldest form of ceramic hand building.

  27. Pinch Pot

  28. Pinch Method:

  29. Two Pinch Pots Combined to create a hollow form:

  30. Coil Method Created through long ropes/coils of clay that are of equal thicknesses are used to build a ceramic object

  31. Coil

  32. Coil

  33. Slab Method • A method of rolling out clay flat to an equal thickness. • Slabs can be cut into shapes and used to construct ceramic objects.

  34. Slab Method

  35. Slab Method

  36. Throwing: A method of forming clay in which the sculptor uses a pottery wheel. Throwing is NOT a technique of hand-building.

  37. Potter’s Wheel : A machine that forms pottery using a wheel

  38. Step 3: Drying Clay • Potters must know how to control the rate at which clay dries. Clay shrinks as it dries and, if it shrinks too rapidly, it can crack. • Clay that has dried to this point is in the leather-hard stage; when pressure is applied to the clay, the form will not easily distort. • See the following Stages of Clay.

  39. 6 Stages of Clay • Slip • Wet/Plastic • Leatherhard • Bone-Dry ~Firing~ 5. Bisque (Bisqueware) ~Firing~ 6. Glazeware (Glazenware) Stages 2 – 4 are also known as Greenware.

  40. 6 Stages of Clay • Slip: Liquid clay; “glue” required to attach two pieces of clay together.

  41. 6 Stages of Clay Con’t • Wet: Plastic clay; workable; easily manipulated. ** IDEAL * When Mrs. Brown gives you clay out of the bag it is in this stage.

  42. 6 Stages of Clay Con’t 3. Leather Hard: Clay is stiff but still damp; firm -maintains form and can be smoothed, carved, and added to. *not easily distorted, but can still be carved.

  43. 6 Stages of Clay Con’t: 4. Bone-dry: Water has evaporated from the clay; form is brittle and ready to be fired. ** Clay becomes lighter in color

  44. 6 Stages of Clay Con’t • Bisque (Bisqueware): fired once; ready to be glazed then fired a second time.

  45. 6 Stages of Clay Con’t 6. Glazeware: Objects that have been fired a second time after glaze has been applied.

  46. Clay may be recycled through the Bone Dry stage by simply rehydrating it. R*E*C*Y*C*L*E : **Once clay has been fired it becomes permanent – it can no longer be recycled.

  47. Step 4: Decorating Clay • Impressing uses an object to press or stamp a design into the clay. • Combing marks the surface of the clay with uniform lines. • Burnishinginvolves rubbing and polishing the surface with a smooth stone or piece of hard wood.

  48. Incising – Carving or cutting into the clay surface with a tool.

  49. Step 5: Glazing • Glaze: A coating of liquid glass that is applied to a clay surface that melts together and forms a decorative and protective surface.

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