UND ART 151/250
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Read the blog below. Choose one piece that you would like to replicate. Print the image of the one you want to make and bring it to class.
Monday, August 27, 2012
Historical Vessel Project
During
the middle Jomon period (2500-1500 BCE), pottery reached a high degree of
creativity. By this time communities were somewhat larger, and each community
may have wanted its ceramic vessels to have a unique design. The basic form
remained the straight-sided cooking or storage jar, but the rim now took on
spectacular, flamboyant shapes... Middle Jomon potters made full use of the
tactile quality of clay, bending and twisting it as well as incising and
applying designs. They favored asymmetrical shapes, although certain elements
in the geometric patterns are repeated. Some designs may have had specific
meanings, but the lavishly creative vessels also display a playful artistic
spirit. Rather than working toward practical goals (such as better firing techniques
or more useful shapes), the Jomon potters seem to have been simply enjoying to
the full their imaginative vision.
The Jomon
Period (c. 12, 000 - 300 BCE) is named for the cord-marked patterns found on
much of the pottery produced during this time. Jomon people were able to develop an unusually sophisticated
hunting-gathering culture in part because they were protected from large-scale
invasions by their island setting and also because of their abundant food
supply... Its people lived in small communities, in the early Jomon period
there were seldom more than ten or twelve dwellings together. All in all, the
Jomon people seem to have enjoyed a peaceful life, giving them the opportunity
to develop their artistry for even such practical endeavors as ceramics.
Jomon
ceramics may have begun in imitation of reed baskets, as many early examples
suggest. Other early Jomon pots have pointed bottoms. Judging from the burn
marks along the sides, they must have been planted firmly into soft earth or
sand, then used for cooking...still other early vessels were crafted with
straight sides and flat bottoms, a shape that was useful for storage as well as
cooking and eventually became the norm. Often vessels were decorated with
patterns made by pressing cord onto the damp clay (jomon means "cord
markings"). Jomon usually crafted their vessels by building them up with
coils of clay, then firing them in bonfires at relatively low temperatures.
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