Water Dragon Reassembled Ring Teapot
11" wide by 18" tall by 9" deep
I started this teapot after completing my purple spiny “It
Is Still; And Yet It Moves Reassembled Ring Teapot.” I
wanted to continue exploring the technique of mounting the teapot
assembly up in the air on a supporting rack, so I could make clay
additions which wouldn’t be strong enough to support the
teapot’s weight until after the clay was fired.
First I threw a ridged, channeled ovoid cross-section ring, cut
through one part of the ring wall, sealed the ends with soft slabs,
and immediately lifted the soft clay hollow hose-like circular
form off the wheel and coiled it up on a board, supporting it in
a spiral shape with sponges and clay props. After drying the closed-form
spiral coil to the leatherhard stage, I placed leatherhard clay
blocks between the coils and joined the blocks together with clay “ropes” so
that it wouldn’t sag when I turned the spiral upright and
mounted it on the rack. I supported the now-upright spiral
2” above a clay slab with 5 leatherhard clay piers of varying
heights attached to the slab. I later added a sixth separate
tall leatherhard clay prop to support the top of the teapot spiral
under the cutout lid opening. The clay props and clay rack
must be of the same clay body and same water content as the teapot,
so they all stay the same size relative to each other as they shrink
while drying out.
I slab-built and attached the spout, added a pulled handle, and
cut out the lid opening, then started to “dress “ the
upright spiraling teapot body. I tried attaching wavy fins
to the teapot channels, but they blocked my view into the spiral’s
interior, so I cut them off. I tried adding flattened curly
spines, but I wasn’t satisfied with their look, so I took
them off. Next I tried adding tapering square-cross-section
spines, and I liked their look after I twisted them. I attached
a lot of twisty spines of varying lengths, making them generally
longer and more spread out toward the bottom of the teapot and
smaller as I moved up the spiral. I added two long twisted
spines as the finial to the teapot lid, reminiscent of the cartoon
character Hagar’s Viking helmet, and added smaller pointy
spines to the spout. I put spines under the handle, but not
on the handle itself—I tried some, but they didn’t
look right, so I cut them off.
I had built the teapot with its supporting clay rack on a wooden
disc, so after I completed attaching the twisty spines, I carefully
slid the drying teapot-rack assembly onto a kiln shelf, and completed
the drying process. I then very carefully lowered the whole
assembly into the kiln, breaking off a few spines in the process
(I guess I wasn’t careful enough, but the whole kiln shelf-teapot-clay
rack assemblage was very heavy and hard to keep balanced.) After
the biscuit firing, I completely waxed the clay rack so no glaze
would stick to it, and waxed the places on the teapot where the
supporting rack piers touched the teapot spiral. I poured our pale
peach-pink glaze all over the teapot, then painted each twisty
spine with dark green at the base, then dark tangerine and orange,
finishing with pale yellow at the tips. After the glaze firing,
I was able to lift the teapot off the rack, although there were
several glaze drips. I ground high points off a few of the
lowest spines so that the teapot rests evenly, and looked at what
I had created. The teapot reminded me of the flying water dragon
in the Japanese anime classic movie “Spirited Away,” by
Hayo Miyazaki’s Studio Ghibli, so I named it “Water
Dragon Reassembled Ring Teapot.” I like very much how
it spirals up from its spiny feet to its Viking helmet-horned lid
finial!
This teapot is for sale.
Price: $1800
If you are interested in purchasing it please visit the Ordering
Information section.
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