“It Is Still (And Yet It Moves)” Reassembled
Ring Teapot
11" tall x 21" wide x 12" deep
cone 5 oxidation firing
I had an idea that I wanted to make a teapot covered with tendrils
or spines, and when it was fired the reassembled ring would be
held off the ground and sit on these spines. I knew I had
to make this teapot on a clay rack strong enough to support the
reassembled ring and tall enough to hold the reassembled ring up
in the air so the spines could hang down in the air and not be
crushed or broken while the teapot dried and during the biscuit
and glaze firings. I made a round cross-section ring and
scored segments into it like a caterpillar body, then cut it into
7 sections and reassembled the ring onto the rack, which had a
wide clay slab base and 5 pier supports of varying heights holding
up the teapot assembly. I cut out the lid, added the segmented
spout and the pulled handle, never once moving the ring assembly
off the clay support rack. I then started from the handle
end and started adding the spines. If you look closely you
will see that the spines around the handle are pointy, but I soon
decided to make them taper to square ends, so I could twist and
curl them into more expressive shapes. It took me parts of
six days just to put on the spines, and there are probably about
300 spines on this teapot! I made sure that none of the spines
touched the upright support posts or the surface of the clay slab
rack. I decided to give this teapot a prickly demeanor, inviting
the viewer to pick it up by the handle, but filling the space inside
the handle with sharp spines so that it is almost impossible to
actually pick up—kind of the rose-and-thorns approach.
After a long drying process, I slid the teapot on the rack onto a kiln
shelf and very carefully lowered the teapot into the kiln. When
I put the teapot into the kiln, I saw that there was only about
1” clearance inside our 23” diameter electric kiln. After
bisque firing, I removed the spiny teapot from the rack and completely
coated the rack with hot wax, so that when I poured glaze all over
the teapot the glaze would not soak into the rack. I first
poured Opaque Glossy White onto the teapot, then let it dry overnight. I
very carefully lifted the teapot off the rack, turned it upside
down onto a folded towel, and handpainted the areas that were missed
in the pouring process. I then carefully put the teapot back
on the rack and poured our Violet Purple glaze all over the teapot. After
another day of drying I again inverted the teapot onto a towel
and painted the missed areas with the second purple glaze coat. The
glaze firing that held this teapot and the Rainbow Of Trout Upright
Ring Teapot was a tense one for me, as there was so much work inside
the kiln and so many ways that things could go wrong. Both
teapots came out super, however, and I am very proud of my artistic
accomplishment.
Many people have told me that this teapot
looks like it is almost moving, so I chose the name “It Is
Still (And Yet It Moves,)” after the phrase that Galileo
is said to have muttered under his breath in 1633 when the Inquisitor,
threatening him with torture and imprisonment, made him recant
his Copernican hypothesis that the earth revolves around the sun.
This teapot is for sale.
Price: $2000
If you are interested in purchasing it please visit the Ordering
Information section.
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