After the peacock fiasco, this was the piece that earnt me the qualification.
I worked hard to make sure the syringe lines had a form and purpose. To be honest, I'm not a great fan of the syringe - something to do with my total inability to keep a steady hand whilst also pushing down on the syringe - but I am often amazed at what others can do with it. So I did want to push myself to showcase some of the possibilities of the syringe in openwork pieces. The syringe can do more than openwork, but this was the requirement from the certification board. I had to try really hard for this piece to have well defined lines (I ended up with my arm on a block of rubber, my left hand holding the unsteady right one, and not breathing, ha ha!). Also this piece is quite small, only about 4 or 5cm square, so you can imagine the fiddliness of the job... I started by doing a series of pebbles individually, cleaning those up and polishing the edges before choosing the nicest ones and attaching them together with paste. Attaching the brooch findings is always a bit tricky but I had calculated the shrinkage well in this piece so it all matched up nicely when fired.
Showing posts with label brooch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brooch. Show all posts
Monday, 14 June 2010
Sunday, 13 June 2010
Fine Silver Peacock
I promised a better introduction to the peacock brooch. He was made of silver clay for the body and a more diluted silver clay which is extruded through a syringe which once fired forms fine lines of fine silver wire, for the plumes. He is quite big at 10x7cm. This was one of the pieces I submitted for my level II ACS certification, and sadly it didn't make the mark. The criticism I received was that the tail was too messy, and I have to agree. The tail actually broke before it was fired, so that made the repair all the more difficult and in the process I lost some of the detail (yes, I had originally syringed individual feathers... so my expletives hit the ceiling when the piece broke and I realised that the repair would make the carefully designed plumage sort of disappear...). You can't see it so well in the picture, but the tail is actually openwork, which means you can see through it in places, a bit like lace.
The problem with this piece was confounded by the fact that as soon as you set out, as an artist, to make a respresentation of something recognisable you automatically add another level of difficulty in ensuring that the piece looks like the thing it is meant to look like. So whilst my melange of feathers did not work as feathers, I wonder whether, had I set out on an abstract piece, the expectation would not be somewhat different. I'm not even talking about the Art Clay Guild judges, as their requirement is very specific, and this piece would not have passed whether as a peacock or as a Pollock. However, even for me, as the maker, I find there is something much more unforgiving about a representational piece as the added challenge is to try and achieve a little bit of realism.
Evidently, a bowl of noodles doth not a peacock's tail make, but I still love this handsome boy.
Wednesday, 12 May 2010
Birdie Love
I am fascinated by birds, always have been, so I couldn't have been more pleased when I started noticing more and more avian-stuff in fashion - suddenly birds were everywhere, from teacups to logos to jewellery.
And I promise it is without an ounce of illwill to all those members of my family with a pronounced aversion to our feathered friends, and just purely as a tribute to this wonderful group of animals (now come on, who hasn't wondered how it feels to actually be a bird in flight, huh?) that I set out to create a few bird-related pieces:
A bird in a fountain ring in sterling silver. He really looks like he's having a bath.
A selection of foresty charms of which one was, of course, an adorable little feathered creature:
And then this handsome fellow.
This aristo peacock is a brooch, and at nearly 10cm long by 7cm wide, and made entirely in fine silver, there is just one of him.
I'll introduce him properly on a later post.
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