Ceramics: Art and Perception

Thirteen Ways of Looking at FIRE

I

I’m looking at a piece of solid fire. There’s no way an artist could have made this object alone. A child, maybe, but I don’t think so, for even in a child’s scribble there is style. You could make a copy of it, but there’s no way you could form it, ex nihilo, out of your own head. The sculpture is beautifully simple. And that’s the key. No human hand could have created this sculpture because no hand, however innocent, can escape the fetters of its style. The object is there, yes, it has been made, yet whichever way you look at it the question remains: who (or should that be what?) did the making? The sculptor who made this object had fifty hands, each attached to a different mind, or no mind at all. The object is sculpted, yes, but with no eyesight colouring the hand. We can talk only of heat and survival.

II

There is something uncanny about that which emerges from fire. The sculpture speaks of deformity. We stare at what in human flesh we would prefer not to see. Hybrid creatures, mythological, alien and recognisable. Ash sinks. Smoke rises. Seeds burst. Stone cools. Planets form. What is it anyway? An element? Earth, air, water … Fire does not exist in the same way. Fire alone lives and dies. As elusive as divinity itself, fire has never been of this world. Prometheus stole it from the gods; every god its personification. Fire creates; fire destroys. Different words for what in fire is the same act. There is no life; there is life. That first moment when

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Ceramics: Art and Perception

Ceramics: Art and Perception5 min read
Fresh New Talent at the British Ceramics Biennial
Nurturing, inspiring and showcasing new talent are at the heart of what we do at the British Ceramics Biennial – and have been since we started our work back in 2009. The most prominent way that we do this is through our platform for emerging ceramic
Ceramics: Art and Perception4 min read
Listening to Clay: Conversations with Contemporary Japanese Ceramic Artists
This is an indispensable book. For anyone interested in contemporary Japanese ceramics it offers an indepth look at the setting and the players through interviews with artists and dealers. Traditions, training, new ideas and opportunities are disclos
Ceramics: Art and Perception7 min read
Brick by Brick: A Brief History of Clay Bricks from Kansas, USA
Let’s face it – bricks are boring. They are rectangular, made of clay, and simply used as literal ‘building’ blocks for utilitarian purposes. I thought this way for decades. I have used firebricks to build gas, sagger, wood, and raku kilns. Aside fro

Related