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Make Play Not Work
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by Adrienne Eliades
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To make a planter, first wedge 2 pounds of porcelain (I use Laguna #16 porcelain) and pat into a ball. Center the clay onto a bat secured on the wheel. Finding the center of the clay, open the ball with two fingers pressing down into the clay, leaving a ¼-inch-thick floor. Pull the wall toward you to define the beginnings of a cylinder that is wider than it is tall. Using a wooden rib, compress and flatten the floor by holding the rib’s short flat side against the clay with light pressure. Next, focus on pulling up the walls consistently until they are ¼ inch thick. No need to make precise measurements for height and width,
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Form First
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Exploration through play is fundamental to a vibrant studio practice. We learn through doing, discovering new directions informed by action and reaction. Engaging with processes and materials without concern for a successful outcome promotes true creative development. In order to adapt my thinking from the repetition of daily studio work to exploration mode, I need a shift of experience. A change of place, season, or making cycle can initiate such a shift. Summer seems to be a particularly experimental time of year for me. The days are long and lazy, giving permission to slow down. Inspired by plants and flowers dotting the landscape in bright colors of the season, planters come to mind as a form to make in an effort to bring that outside beauty indoors.
www.potterymaking.org | September/October 2021
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