An unexpected Pleasure!

serpentine[1]
Serpentine Rock from the Lizard peninsula
Polyphant
This rock goes by the wonderful name of Polyphant!

So the summer of love has turned into the summer of rain, too much wind or not enough wind and very poor visibility.  All this means that a coffee (and one of their waste-line wrecking cakes) at the Arts Café, Truro, seemed a much better bet than going sailing!  Given that I am a card carrying member of the Royal Cornwall Museum next door it seemed a good idea to go and explore the displays and stay out of the rain.  I love the geology section of this museum.  I have spent many a happy winter hour gazing at remarkable rocks from around the county.  I really enjoy the way that you can open most of the drawers to discover hidden secrets about rocks, the earth and all things rocky.

Having spent a while reacquainting myself with the beautifully marked samples of Serpentine and Polyphant  I wandered upstairs past Poldark’s Cornwall to an exhibition in the temporary galleries by an artist who I try never to miss – Kurt Jackson.

I first came across Jackson at Lemon Street Gallery, Truro.  I was drawn to his work because of its expressive quality.  I love the exciting, liberating loose marks with which he gives a fabulous sense of freedom and I find his colour palette really draws me in.  Much of his work is about Cornwall and Devon, my favourite counties on the planet.  I share his love of the wild places; his paintings, which are often done en plein air, represent the moors, rivers and coastline which I adore and have within them a real sense of passion.  So I was a little surprised by this newest exhibition.  It is called Place and in it Jackson has worked with a number of writers from different parts of Britain and from different backgrounds.  The outcome is a diverse range of paintings and sculptures which hint at the diversity of our landscape but also have a sense of nostalgia about them.  The paintings are exciting and have a real sense of feeling and yet there was something missing.  I found myself looking in a rather more detached way than I am used to with Jackson’s work.   By working in areas which meant a lot to other people but little to him he has moved away from the personal and I think the work reflects this.  Somehow I encountered an air of detachment which I have never experienced when I have gazed at his work in the past.   Place[1]

Bridget Macklin Wyck Vessel.
What is it that is making me so excited about this new work?

I am left puzzling about this – is it that I have no attachment to these places or is it because he has none?  Do we, as landscape artists of any genre, need to be personally involved  in order to imbue our work with that deeper sense of meaning which is so intangible and yet clearly speaks to us?  If so, this makes it really difficult to branch out and explore unfamiliar territory.  Is there not a risk that any such adventure will be thwarted by unfamiliarity and subsequent loss of deep involvement?

I don’t think that this can be the case.  I have recently been experimenting with including local finds and information about a place in my work and have been completely engrossed in the process.  I am really excited by the results which definitely have a great sense of meaning to me.  So far this work has been exploratory.  The first pieces were in response to some clay which I was given from the foundations of my sister’s house extension.  This is a place that I know well and yet it holds no particular draw for me.  I suppose time and more work will tell whether the sense of passion which has grown in me for this new line of work is because of my feelings for my sister and her home or down to my excitement at the unpredictability of adding strange, untested clay to my work and just letting things happen.

It Just Goes To Show How Much I Don’t Know

Egg shell inlaid ceramics
Egg shell inlaid ceramics

This week I visited a gallery, Spindrift, in Portscatho, which is local to me in Cornwall.  They have a good selection of ceramics, much of it quite functional and very lovely.  Most of it by local artists.  So I reached up to a high shelf and pointed to a pair of lovely green bottles.  They had a generous, welcoming shape but what intrigued me was the surface finish.  At first sight I thought that a crackle glaze might have been used, but that didn’t look quite right.  Were they raku fired?  No, the mottled effect was the colour IN the lines, which was a really lovely green.  What secrets were hidden here?

I commented on the vessels and asked if I might lift one down.  ” Those?” uttered the owner of the gallery with a slight twinkle in his eye, “By all means, but they are not for sale.  I bought them in a well known DIY shop a few years ago.  They cost £8:00 and I wanted them to hide my wifi.”  Oh how embarrassing! I am supposed to know about ceramics now.  I have a diploma so I must do, right?  Wrong!  I know nothing except how much I don’t know!

In fact I was reassured later in my conversation with the gallery owner, Fred, who told me that I was by no means the first person to be taken in by the vases.  He told me about the people who ‘knew it all’ and who would come in and tell their companions all about the techniques used and be completely incorrect about their theories.  In fact, I discovered, egg shell had played a crucial role in the creation of the surface.  I rushed home to look it up.

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I can feel an idea hatching . . . .
It transpired that this is done by a type of inlaying by the Chinese.  I found a U-tube video showing me how to do it and all sorts of images and instructions.  It got me wondering though.  How else might egg shell have been used in ceramics?  It is a great source of calcium which I know to be a secondary flux.  Fluxes are used to lower the melting point of the glass formers in a glaze.  Secondary fluxes only become active at higher temperatures and within that higher range calcium is a fairly useful addition to many a glaze recipe so . . . . what would happen?  I wonder . . . . . I feel some trials coming on as soon as I get back from my self imposed holiday from the studio.  Watch this space . . . .