Showing posts with label beach combing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beach combing. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 January 2017

In Situ

Well it's about that time of year again for my yearly blogpost, although one of my New Year resolutions (AGAIN!) is to try to keep this blog more up-to-date.  Maybe this year I will actually succeed ;)

Anyway it has been a busy year in the Tinderbox!  Firstly, I was very excited to be able to join a new artist's collective based in Cork called Over The Line Studios.  It is really the first studio in Cork which actually provides for ceramicists, and we have access to a range of kilns and individual spaces large enough to cope with the general chaos which seems to be generated by anyone who works with clay.

As well as ceramics we also have a mix of artists working with various media such as painting, photography, textiles and sculpture, which is great for learning new skills and bouncing ideas.

The studios are situated over a kitchen showroom where beautiful high-spec kitchens are on display.  For our opening group show it was decided we would be showing our pieces inside the kitchens, which took a while for some of us to get our heads around.  What...no white walls?  No PLINTHS???  How is our stuff going to work in a room full of shiny marble and MIRRORS?? However, once we had freed ourselves from our mental straight jackets we could see how exciting and different the possibilities were.

It was entitled In Situ, as the work was, obviously, being shown in situ, and bar the odd crash and heart-breaking smash it was a roaring success, and firmly put OverTheLineStudios on the Cork art scene.  There was lots of wine, there was music, there was dancing and it was great to discover how well we could all pull together as a team when it mattered.

Anyhoo, here are some pics of the work on display.  If any of you are ever in Cork and fancy popping in to the studios to say hi, please do! ;)

Driftwood Disc:  Saggar-Fired Stoneware, Found Chain, Driftwood



Beach Stones:  Saggar-Fired Stoneware.  Photography by Dervla Baker.


Beach Stones:  Saggar-Fired Stoneware.  Photography by Dervla Baker.


Escapades of Chickens:  Saggar-Fired Stoneware, Found Toolbox, Found tools.
We found this old toolbox our rambling one day and it took a couple of years of subconscious festering before I finally decided what to do with it. Basically a chicken escaped and laid it's eggs in a tool box.  I got the idea from a painting hanging in the Crawford Art Gallery of a basketful of eggs.  Not sure who painted it, nor am I sure how my mind managed to make a connection to the toolbox but hey ho that is what happened and here are the results ;)





By The Sea:  Black and White Stoneware, Found Chain, Driftwood.
The black ceramic beach stones with white stripes in this piece were inspired by the beautiful stones on one of my favourite beaches here in Cork.  Obsidian?  Quartz?  Geology is not my strong point but I would like to find our more ;)

Dragon Eggs and Mordor:  Saggar and Sawdust-Fired Stoneware



Black Dog: Saggar-Fired Stoneware

Sunday, 17 January 2016

Drift

So when I rocked up at the fourth year graduate show at my college, lurching in my unfamiliar heels and tugging at my figure-suffocating dress, I wasn't expecting to win anything.  We had been told repeatedly that ceramics never wins anything.  Ceramics isn't really ART.  However, all my stars must have been out or maybe there was some giant shift in the cosmos because my name started being called out, and not just once but several times!  And I don't think anyone was more surprised than I was.  After all, I hadn't even studied art at school.  I had wrangled my way into an access college at the grand old age of 30 with a random googly mess of photographs and bits and bobs I had produced at various arty evening courses.  I spent the subsequent four years at art school feeling like I was surrounded by real artists while I was just a faker, wrestling with self doubt and a medium which is as complex as it is surprising.  Ceramics is, more often than not, a heart-breaking business. Cracks appear where they shouldn't, glazes come out completely differently from what you expected them to, a careless elbow can send two months worth of work crashing to the floor (yes, that happened!).  However, just once in a while, you get a result which makes all the crying and sighing and head banging worth it, and that is for me where the excitement lies.  The lure of the Great Unknown.

'Hanging Disc' - saggar-fired stoneware and driftwood


One of the prizes that fortuitous night was the CIT Registrar's Prize, which is bestowed by the head bigwig of the college our art college was affiliated to.  He has a keen eye and normally, we had been told, favours landscape painters so it was quite a shock to bag that one.  The prize was a solo show up in the main CIT campus, complete with all marketing and curating covered and no commission charged on the work. Wow.  I was bowled over at the generosity of the prize, while at the same time I was thrown into a flat-spin panic.  My fourth year show had, amazingly, been pretty much a sell-out.  I didn't have anything left for a solo show.  I had a job which I was due to go back to full-time, no studio, and, probably more importantly, I was completely burnt out.  I was looking forward to a holiday and not having to think about ceramics for a while.  Fourth year, for me, had been a trial by fire.  I had spent the year fighting with myself, aware I was on the cusp of something but being unable to articulate what it was exactly as everything I was doing was purely instinctive.  I knew that I would get there, I always had faith in this, somehow, but I wasn't sure when it would happen, and it certainly wasn't happening fast enough for my tutors ;)

Luckily I was also offered a three month graduate residency at the Sculpture Factory in Cork, which threw me a lifeline for which I am eternally grateful, and I met some wonderful people there.  It allowed me time to think and tinkle, and although most of the time I was there was spent preparing for another group exhibition the work I did there fed into the solo show.  I was able to build on the ideas I had started in fourth year and really see where I was going.

Work in progress at the Sculpture Factory


After the residency was over I still wasn't ready, however, and the clock was ticking.  I really didn't want my first solo show to be cobbled together from the scraps left over from other things.  I wanted it to be a cohesive culmination of ideas that I felt happy with.  When Kevin, who was coordinating the show, rang to see how I  was doing I ended up panicking down the phone to him and telling him there would be no way I would be ready in time and would it be possible to postpone it by, say, a year??  He was wonderfully understanding, however, came round on his bicycle one evening for a cup of tea and calmed me right down.  It was agreed that the show would take place in October 2014 (yes, I know, I am very late in writing this post!), which gave me an extra seven months from when it was originally supposed to be.

Phew.  When it was time to leave the sculpture factory I moved operations to our largely redundant front room in the house I shared with four other incredibly tolerant housemates ( as one of them remarked, while observing the mess of tree trunks and bits of metal "it's like the outside has come inside...").  I wasn't prepared, however, for how hard the next few months would turn out to be.

'River Ring' - found metal ring, saggar-fired stoneware, bicycle spoke, driftwood

I teach English as a day job.  Whilst preparing for the solo show I requested that my hours were cut so that I was only teaching in the mornings and had the afternoon to make ceramics.  I have long held a theory, however, that it is actually really difficult to switch between the two sides of your brain in one day.  Teaching uses the left, art uses the right.  If I had the whole day to purely concentrate on one or the other everything seemed to come much more easily.  Switching from one to the other in the same day is exhausting.  I soon fell into a pattern of napping in the afternoons after work and then working at the ceramics until the early hours.  The weekends were spent purely in the front room. Summer slipped tantalisingly past outside the window and I felt increasingly tetchy and claustrophobic. My relationship suffered, as my boyfriend at the time who is immensely talented and who helped me a lot with the wood and metal and drilling and soldering and all the things I wasn't so good at, became more and more impatient with the length of my fuse and what he viewed as my chaotic disorganisation.

'Churn' - found metal milk churn with black stoneware and sawdust-fired terracotta


However, by a combination of luck and sheer bloody-mindedness everything came together in the end and was, by all accounts, a success.  The photographs here are not so successful, unfortunately, but you can hopefully get an idea ;) I am aware that this post might sound a bit ungrateful but that is not my intention.  I am extremely grateful to everyone who had faith in me when I didn't.  I have been amazed at how my work has been accepted by a wider audience and how supportive everyone has been.  It has been the encouragement I needed to keep going and without that I might still not be making, because the purpose I suppose of this post and the reason it has taken me so long to write it is that it is hard to admit that creating art is HARD.  It has, for me, been one of the hardest things I have ever done.  For anyone who thinks that art students are dossers who don't do any work, try doing an art degree.  It will challenge everything you have ever known about yourself.  It will shake you to your core, make you question everything you thought you were capable of.  It will force you to excavate the depths of yourself and believe me that ain't pretty half the time. And then at the end you have to lay everything out on the table and allow yourself to be judged.  This, for me, is probably the hardest part.  I am not naturally a 'look at me!' kind of person.  Being an artist requires you to do that.  It requires that you put yourself out there and, effectively, sell yourself to the highest bidder. You have to put your work out in the public eye and weather the reaction, whether positive or negative. And as your work is usually a result of some serious soul-mining, that is a pretty scary thing to do. .I also always felt like if the solo show wasn't any good I would be letting a lot of people down, all these people who had put their faith and resources in me, and that felt like a lot of pressure.

'Driftwood Boat' - found bog yew with saggar-fired stoneware

On top of that, try doing an art degree in ceramics and then try being taken seriously as an artist. Ceramics has long been considered the lowest of the low.  It is, apparently, a combination of skill and function.  It has no place in fine art.  Every year representatives come from the RDS in Dublin to check out fourth year work.  They looked at mine and informed me that there would be no point in  applying for the RDS.  When I asked why not they said that they either had a category for fine art or one for craft, and wouldn't know where to put me.  I said I don't see why mine can't be considered fine art, and they said it was because I had used clay. Apparently it is ok to use paint, metal, rubber, wool, anything, really, apart from one of the most versatile substances on Earth. (Sorry, rant over ;))

Drift was a show about our relationship with our environment. It explored how nature attempts to break down our waste products and how the results can be unexpectedly beautiful, and it celebrated the natural beauty of the wild coastlines of where I am lucky enough to live, in the South West of Ireland. It remains the result of someone who struggled innately with herself to produce it, and to all intents and purposes it is something I can finally say I am proud of.  It is, I hope, part of an awakening which I think has been happening recently, that is the perception of ceramics as an art form rather than a craft.  It is also a testament to everyone who helped me achieve this, and to everyone who kept me going when I wanted to give up, and I will always be thankful for that ;)


'Ag Na Farriage' - Black and White stoneware, found chain, driftwood

'Whalefish' - saggar-fired stoneware, found chain, driftwood


'Morning Glory 'I - saggar-fired stoneware, found metal frame, slate


'Morning glory II' - saggar-fired stoneware, found metal frame, slate

'Iron Sky I' - saggar-fired stoneware, found metal frame, slate



'Iron Sky II' - saggar-fired stoneware, found metal frame, slate

'Iron Sky III' - saggar-fired stoneware, found metal frame, slate



All set up


Opening night 






















Tuesday, 29 April 2014

Beyond The Ha-Ha

Cor well I can't believe I haven't been near this blog for almost a year.  So much has happened!  Since I finished college I have been pretty busy trying to learn how to be a proper artist ha.  I was awarded a three month graduate residency in the National Sculpture Factory here in Cork, which was really exciting.  I have just finished my stint there and am currently showing work in a group show called Beyond the Ha-Ha, so I thought I would share a little bit of my new work with you.

We had a wild winter, so the beaches were awash with all sorts of rubbish.  This was good news for a bin-raking beachcomber like me, so I filled my poor groaning car with sackfuls of crap and loads of interesting driftwood and hauled it all home to Tinderbox HQ, i.e our shed ;)




My good friend Amy and I spent about a week making loads of plaster moulds of beach stones so that I could make a whole heap of ceramic stones.  Some of them I saggar-fired, and some were made of terracotta and sawdust-fired, and I also discovered black porcelain for the first time which is gorgeous stuff to work with. I had fun trying to balance the stones of top of one another in  different formations;



One of my favourite finds was a stove top which was all rusted.  I fell in love with the shape of it and would have been quite happy to just show it on its own as I think it is beautiful, however it was further enhanced by the addition of some of the black and red stones:



One glorious evening I decided to take some of the new stuff down to the beach and do a photoshoot.  The light was wonderful and luckily I managed to get loads of pictures just before the tide came in oof that would have been a disaster ha ;)




I also wanted to get some driftwood in there, so I made a saggar-fired hanging piece with a particularly lovely flat piece:


Anyway the show is running until the 4th of May in the Wandesford Quay Gallery, so if any of you are around Cork please do pop in. There are also more ceramics on display, as well as paintings and sculpture.  In the meantime I shall be keeping busy with my first solo show in October (eek!) and trying to keep a lid on the panic ;) Your comments are, as always, most welcome ;)












Sunday, 19 May 2013

Axeheads and Driftwood

Cor well I am limping to the end of this year...only one and a half weeks to go before assessments and I still have quite a few sculptures to make when the pieces come out of the kiln eek!  Still, I am really going to miss this college as it has been an amazing time, and I just hope I can find a way to keep making after I finish.

I thought I would share some of the pieces which will be going into the final exhibition ( I hope!)  There is still more to come but these are a few that are actually finished ahem...;)

I became somewhat fascinated by axeheads last term.  There is something lovely about their swooping shapes and once saggar-fired they look lovely with the silver birch.




This term took me on a hunt for more seasoned wood and I ended up on the beach hunting for driftwood.  I found some lovely pieces of wood and an old washed up frame, so I decided to try and do something with them.





A friend of mine also hauled these two pieces off the beach for me...they are massive and were very wet and soft, but I have scooped them out and dried them off and sanded them, so hopefully will be able to use them for something ;)


All the plastic I found on the beach will be made into wall pieces with the ceramic discs, and I have made hanging discs with ceramic versions of the plastic to highlight their colours.











And I made a couple more with some driftwood and shells...



And a dish, for good measure ;)


Anyhoo, hopefully it will all come together in the end and not look like a complete dog's dinner...there could well be more culling to come before the final cut, but I've enjoyed the journey I've been on this year and there are elements of the work here which I would like to expand upon in the future.

If any of you are in Cork and would be interested in coming to the exhibition, feel free, as it is free and there will also be free booze available ;) It is on the 7th June in the Crawford College of Art, and more information can be found here...


It'll be great craic ;)