Why wheel work should not precede hand building exercises in learning pottery
Pottery does not restrict itself to making pots as is often
what people mistake it for. Pottery is an art. Art has no boundaries. In fact, artistic pots can also be made by
hand using coils and there is no need for a wheel. The pots are made so look very aesthetic too as
well as unique and novel, considering they are handmade and not on the electronic
wheel.
When a person wants to get very
creative and display their uniqueness and carve a niche for themselves in the
arena of pottery, they must first learn
how to cope with clay in the first place and experiment their heart’s worth
with hand building ideas. These develop your patience and time management
skills apart from developing your creative instincts and motivating you to
focus and build eye-hand coordination, which will be very useful later on. This
will also give you a cutting edge over the others as your workmanship is
definitely richer, cleaner and neater due to practice for 20-40 classes as the
case may be.
Pottery has many advantages for the
corporate world too, which I will discuss in detail in my next blog.
The finest of intricacies come by
handwork as detailing cannot be done on the electronic wheel. The handwork takes most part of the time as
it involves mashing clay first, then comes the designing layouts and may
involve pinching, pitting, coiling, scoring, gumming, and possibly
slab work at a dimensional level too. So
it calls for a lot of effort in artistic pottery.
Once a person masters the intricacy,
the wheel work is just a cake walk and child’s play. But on the other hand, if
a person attempts to learn the wheel work first , he or she may not be inclined
to work in intricacy and detailing as
the mind will not allow scope for it ,
being accustomed to the wheel. Hence creativity takes a back seat. This is my take.
One must learn a bit of Traditional,
Modern and contemporary art with possibly a bit of abstracts too in their basic
levels in pottery to fine tune
themselves and then hop on to the wheel for further advancements in level 2 or
3.
The wheel can at the most bring out
different sizes and shapes akin to that of pots and circular items. Nothing
goes beyond that. The creative freak and
individuality lies in our hand work in display.
Art is that which should make the
onlooker feel the piece come alive and feel the joy of the hand work and relish
it. Anybody can churn pots on the wheel as it is not some rocket science; the
potters’ families have been doing it for ages. It is nothing new. They are merely potters who have learnt to
execute pots on the wheel from their forefathers and are carrying on their rich
tradition, not gone beyond to lend an artistic touch to cater to the
competitive world of today. But, what is
the add -on you envisage is what lends the difference between you and another
in pottery, if you wish to establish an identity or brand name in the field.
So learn your basics and have a
strong footage in hand work as, in my opinion, that has yielded good results
and the outcome is fantastic. Once you
master handwork, make your foray into the wheel so that you subsequently master the wheel. Then combine your
expertise in both to churn out enviable pieces of art. This is value addition
in artistic pottery. In art , be a
class apart.
The wheel seems to be a craze for the onlooker
at a first glance and makes an impact on
the onlooker on account of its fast rotating movements and speed. But a strong foundation in hand-building
ideas is invaluable to stay a class
apart.
Cheers to unique pottery from you!
About the Writer : Malini is the Founder Director of Artistic Pottery Training Academy , a trainer and artist herself. website: www.malinipottery.com. These are her views as a professional in the field .

Awesome perspective.Loved the article.
ReplyDeleteO that's so nice ...Thank you very much Quran Journey
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