Monday, December 29, 2014
Pinch Pot Lesson Salt and Pepper Shakers
Name: ____________________ Period _______
Instructor: Makely
Pinch Pot Assignment and Overview
What is the value of creating pinch pots today? What
types of pottery can pinching produce? How are pinch pots created?
1. The Value of Creating Pinch Pots
Producing pinch pots is the
most direct method people have of interacting with clay. We push, and the clay
responds. We pinch, and again the clay responds. We can learn a huge amount
simply through the experience of directly modifying the clay's form. It is a
great way to introduce a person to clay.
Pinching clay can teach us
tactile sensitivity. Through this process, we more easily learn to rely on our
fingers to tell us information about the clay. We can develop a kinetic
awareness of form and of the thickness of walls and floors.
This tactile awareness will
enhance our pottery skills across the board. Through creating pinch pots, we
can continual refine our ability to work by touch, rather than by sight alone.
2. What Type of Pottery Can Pinching Produce?
Although there are exceptions,
most pinched pottery is less than six inches in diameter. Pinch pots can range
from chunky, substantial pieces to very thin-walled and delicate pieces. Pinch
pot vessels can be decorated in many ways, but there does seem to be an added
affinity between pinch pots and burnishing, a method to bring a gloss to
unglazed pieces.
Pinching isn't just for vessel
forms, however. Many clay whistles and pipes are made through the pinching
method. Sculptural forms are also possible. One of my personal favorites,
especially when just relaxing, is to make little pinch pot animals.
Pinch pots may be small, but
they allow our creativity full rein. Our imaginations are the limit.
3. The Physics of Pinch Pots
Do you remember the adage from
physics that goes "an action will
produce an equal and opposite reaction"? In working with clay, this
means that the clay will move away from pressure.
How the pressure is applied
directly affects how the clay responds to it. After opening the clay, the tip
of the thumb is used on the lower part of the interior of the pot. That pushes
the clay at the bottom outward, widening the pot's floor, without having the
entire ball of clay flare outward.
By working with controlled
pinches, you can control the shape of the pot. If you pinch indiscriminately,
without thinking about how the clay will react and where it will move, you will
loose control.
4. Pinching Tips
Here are some pointers for
creating pinch pots:
- work in a spiral from bottom to top
- use the tip of your thumb on the interior, while supporting the exterior with your other hand
- minor stretch cracks can be left as a textural effect, if desired
- deep cracks should be welded immediately using a tiny amount of slurry or slip
- rims can be left untrimmed or they can be trimmed with a potter's needle when the pot is leather-hard
- the pot can be smoothed, or even burnished with a wooden rib, when the pot is leather-hard.
Rubric and Requirements: You are going to create two sets or salt
and pepper shakers using Pinch pot construction. You will also be using techniques such as paddling, burnishing,
carving, appliqué, and imprinting. Each
pot is no larger than .50 pounds, (½ the size of your fist) unless you are
going to add a base as part of your design. Explore the internet and see all
the possible designs that you can come up with.
Bring in images and attach them on the inside of your sketchbook before
you began. 3 drawings or 3 images will be part of the sketchbook grade. ____________ /60 points possible for
sketchbook. Sketchbook is Due:
_________
Tips for creating
your two sets or salt and pepper shakers.
Pay attention to the form, size, foot and lip –design and
decoration is your choice.
Parts of the pot
Evaluation
Part 1
– For 15 points answer the following: POINTS
EARNED: ___
Answer the following questions in your sketchbook.
1. Identify
and describe which set is you’re best or favorite.
Explain why.
2. Identify
your weakest finished clay piece.
Share
two ways that it could be improved.
a.
b.
3. Define
or explain the following clay terms:
a. Wedging
b. Green
ware
c. Bisque
ware
d. Pinch
pot
e. Draw
out a pinch pot and identify the foot and lip.
f. Slip
and scoring
g. Bone
Dry
4. In
your own words please answer the following three questions
a. What
is the value of creating pinch pots today?
b. What
types of pottery can pinching produce?
c. How are pinch pots created?
Part 2: Evaluating your two sets of green
ware clay pieces.
Use this scale. 90-100=
weak/poor 115 = average 120 = strong 125 = very
strong
First
set of salt and pepper shakers
Appropriate wall thickness for size + Aesthetic quality
of form/design + foot and lip= _______/125
Second
set of salt and pepper shakers with base or plate
The Idea + the
form + wall thickness + Aesthetic quality of the form/design= _____/125
Total points earned on Pinch Pot Assignments: _________________________________ /250
Modified Pinch Pot lesson for Special Education and pera
Ceramics I
Pinch Technique: Creating a Single Opening Pinch Pot
Modified Assignment for Special Education
Name:
_______________________________________________________________ Period: _______
1. Form a ball of
pre-wedged clay by rotating and pressing together a fist size chunk of clay.
2. Insert thumb into
center of ball without pushing through the bottom.
3. Lightly pinch with
thumb on inside and fingers on outside as ball is rotated in opposite hand.
4. Continue pinching until desired
shape is acquired. The walls should not be thicker than your thumb.
5. If clay is too dry, cracks will
appear. Apply slip to cracks and blend.
6. If clay is too wet, the form may be
weak. Place in plastic bag overnight to let set slowly.
7. When finished, walls
should be relatively thin, but not so that the piece collapses.
8. Texture and designs
can be added to the surface by impressing, adding features, or carving.
9. Also, the piece does not have to
be left in a radial design, it can change shape simply by pinching into another
form, i.e., a square or star.
FOR THIS PROJECT:
·
Create a single opening pinch pot that
showcases something about YOU and your interests.
·
Incorporate areas of TEXTURE through
impressing, adding clay, or carving.
·
Develop the composition from ALL ANGLES!
·
Follow the guidelines laid out in the
following grading rubric.
Grading Rubric:
Directions & Techniques: (25 pts)
Student Grade _____
Teacher Grade _____
• Followed all project directions
and requirements (name and period carved on bottom of
piece, incorporated
pattern or texture on
surface).
• Used appropriate
building techniques (even & consistent wall thickness throughout: max
pinkie-width)
Composition & Creativity: (25 pts)
Student Grade _____
Teacher Grade _____
• Final composition is
highly developed and unified
• Interesting from all
angles
• Showcase a high level
of creativity in texture/design/form, not
overly simple or plain
Craftsmanship: (25 pts)
Student Grade _____
Teacher Grade _____
•
High level of craftsmanship
• Everything (surfaces,
details, connections/scoring & slipping) is done in a neat and clean manner
• No extra marks,
gashes, remnants, or cracks
Participation,
Effort, Attitude: (25 pts)
Student Grade _____
Teacher Grade _____
•
Student worked every day for the entire period without a reminder
• Cleaned up adequately
and at the appropriate time each day
• Too responsibility for
their project, work area, and respected the projects and work areas of others
Pottery 1 Course Description
Essential Questions
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Essential Learning
The
expectations, policies, and consequences of the Monarch Art Department support
those found in the Student Handbook. The expectations, policies, and
consequences have been developed to promote a positive, creative and productive
learning environment.
EQUIPMENT, MATERIALS, AND FURNITURE
Students will be expected to do the following:
use materials, tools and furniture safely and appropriately; to wash, to clean
and to return all tools, equipment and materials to their designated area; and
to clean their entire work space.
PARTICIPATION/EFFORT
Each and every
student plays a vital role in establishing a friendly and respectful positive
learning environment. Students are expected to actively participate in all art
room activities. Whether working on studio projects, writing papers, critiquing
art, working in groups, cleaning-up, participating in class discussions, etc., students are expected to use proper
language and proper behavior. In appropriate comments, behaviors, gestures or
noises, too much socializing, doing nothing and/or failure to assist in clean
up will result in detention, parent contact and loss of participation/effort
points. Each semester evaluation will include participation/effort points.
ATTENDANCE
Perfect attendance is strongly recommended. If
you are absent, it is your
responsibility to find out what you missed the first day that you return to art
class. At that time, if there was specific work completed, establish a
reasonable due date with your instructor. If you discover that you primarily
missed work time, strongly consider attending “Open Studio” to obtain
additional work time or if feasible, work on the project at home. Unexcused absences will affect your
grade and can result in loss of credit. Loss
of credit will occur if absences are excessive!
TARDIES
You are expected to come to class on time. You
have one free tardy per semester.
DETENTION AND OTHER CONSEQUENCES
Detentions
are 15 minutes long. A
detention can be served after school or during lunch within 3 school days. If not served within 3 days, it is written
up as a discipline referral. Students in detention will be asked to do some
sort of job in the art room, such as cleaning sinks, tables, etc. Other
consequences for inappropriate behaviors include being asked to apologize, not
being able to use equipment, not being able to sit with friends, time out, zero
for the day or project, a discipline referral, etc.
ART IMAGES/OBJECTS
Working in a school environment does place some
limitations on the images that can be used in your artwork. Drug related imagery, gang, pornographic
images, and /or symbols offensive to specific racial, ethnic, gender or religious
groups will be considered inappropriate and unacceptable by the Monarch Art
Department. Use of such images or symbols will result in detention, parental
contact, and a possible discipline referral.
____________________________________________________________________________________________
Signature
Page can be printed and returned back to Mrs. Makely the first week.
I have read
or been informed of the expectations, policies, and consequences for the
Monarch Art Department. Please sign and return the cut off signature section
with the $30.00 art fee. Checks may be written to the Monarch Art Department.
Student:
___________________________________________
Parent: _______________________________________
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