Taj Mahal Screen Upright Ring Teapot
17" tall x 17" wide x 4" deep
When you click on theTeapot Index Page for the Jet
Black Upright Ring Teapot, you will read that when I made that teapot, I was “…going
back to older ideas and reviewing them in light of what I had learned
since that earlier work.” This Taj Mahal Upright Ring
Teapot was inspired by the Jet Black
Upright Ring Teapot, which I had made 7 years earlier while contemplating the twelfth century
Hindu “Shiva Nataraj” bronze sculpture depicting the
goddess Shiva dancing in a ring of flames. Close friends
had recently returned from a trip to India, which included a visit
to the Taj Mahal. While describing this wonderful inspired
architectural, sculptural, and artistic mausoleum, they mentioned
that the tomb inside the Taj Mahal building is surrounded by a
carved marble screen.
I know that my reassembled ring and upright ring teapots deal more
with sculptural ideas about the teapot form than the process of
brewing and serving tea, so I decided to “trap” my
upright ring teapot idea, including the handle, lid, and spout,
in a carved/pierced ceramic screen. I completed the upright
ring teapot, then filled the inside of the ring, and enclosed the
outside space in and around the handle, spout, and lid finial,
with solid ¼” thick leatherhard clay slabs. I
had to do a lot of careful edge-joining to complete the slabwork
outside the ring. I then carved an abstract flowing pattern
through the slabs with an x-acto knife, keeping the parts of the
teapot I was not carving damp by wrapping them in drycleaner plastic
and periodically misting the slabs. After drying and biscuiting
the completed teapot, I poured our glossy opaque white glaze over
both sides of the teapot, paintbrushing missed parts and fettling
off thick drips and runs. I then handpainted both sides of
the teapot body and lid with our pale green glaze, followed by
handpainting both front and back surfaces of the pierced screen
with our pale lilac purple glaze. I completed the glazing
by handpainting the carved-through edges of the slabs with our
bright yellow glaze. The glazing process alone took three
long afternoons.
I thought for sure that I would have to re-fire the teapot after
the glaze firing because of glaze crawls, but the glaze surface
came out perfectly with no flaws after only one firing! The
yellow highlights on the carved screen edges really add visual
interest to this teapot sculpture, because they are almost invisible
when viewing the teapot straight on, but they glow golden when
viewing the teapot from an angle. I am very pleased with
my achievement in imagining, then making this teapot.
This teapot is for sale.
Price: $2000
In addition to my unique reassembled ring teapots, my partner Susan Nykiel and I also make a wide range of functional and elegant pottery pieces. Please visit our new online store at oakbluffspottery.etsy.com to see what we have to offer! This is an excellent place to shop for beautiful handmade pottery for your own home or for your gift-giving pleasure. |