Six Parrots, A Goldfinch Takes Flight Reassembled Ring Teapot
17 " x 9" tall wide x 7 " deep
With this teapot I returned to the six-pointed star cross-section
ring I previously used for the Purple
Foamy Whitecaps Reassembled Ring Teapot and the Gray-Green
Six-Pointed Star Cross-Section Reassembled Ring Teapot. I wanted to make a free-standing reassembled
ring composition stretched out horizontally, not mounted on a base,
recalling my earlier Orange 5-Pointed
Star Cross-Section Reassembled Ring Teapot, but this time attaching the cut apart arc sections
in a zigzag pattern rather than overlapping them horizontally as
in the Orange Teapot. I attached a sculpted finial to the
lid, inspired by a combination of images of a feathery plume, a
pineapple top, a fountain spray, and a fireworks burst. I
also returned to a thrown spout from the handbuilt slab spout I
have been using recently, but without the spiraling ridge decoration
of many of my earlier teapot spouts, opting instead for the smooth-surface
thrown spout I used on the Purple Foamy Whitecaps Teapot. For
the teapot body glaze treatment I also returned to the earlier
pale green glaze covered with a second coat of pink glaze I first
used on my Pink Pentagonal Cross-Section Teapot, then my Pink-Green
Oval Cross-Section Teapot, and my Bird
Of Paradise Teapot. Thinking
of my fireworks-burst inspiration for my sculpted lid finial, I
glazed it in yellow and orange with blue highlights. There
were some glaze crawls that had to be repainted, and then I glaze-fired
the teapot a second time, softening and blending the green and
pink glaze colors.
While contemplating the completed teapot, I was reminded of a
movie we recently viewed, “The Wild Parrots Of Telegraph
Hill,” about a man in San Francisco who observed, cared for,
and adopted a flock of wild Cherry-Headed Conure parrots, which
are green-colored with red heads. This teapot’s composition
reminded me of how those parrots would perch in a group on a telephone
wire and seem to converse with each other. Their green and
red colors blended like the pink and green of this teapot. My
mind then saw the teapot lid finial as a reference to a bird we
see often at our home birdfeeder, an American Goldfinch bursting
into flight. I doubt that American goldfinches and Cherry-Headed
Conure parrots exist in nature in the same environment, either
in San Francisco or the parrots’ native Ecuador, but they
do now in my “Six Parrots, A Goldfinch takes Flight Reassembled
Ring Teapot.” I am the artist, and I take my inspiration
from wherever it comes and combine it all into a new vision in
my artwork!
This teapot is for sale.
Price: $1400
If you are interested in purchasing it please visit the Ordering
Information section.
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