Friday, May 22, 2020

Beehive kilns - my surprising discovery




In India,



click for detail



In the summer of 2012, I started to explore the possibility of setting up a ceramic studio at my ancestral home. My ancestors lived in a small village of nearly 50 families at the time, called Asthua. The closest town (Laheriasarai) with any markets or household goods was 30kms away, and travel to it required almost an hour of tiring drive on very rough roads. This area is rich in alluvial soil, and agriculture is the dominant industry. 

During an earlier trip to Japan, I learned that potters would use clay from the agricultural lands as part of the composition for stoneware clay body. In this area, then, I had direct access to largest part of material required in producing stoneware clay. Within a radius of 500kms were several coal mines, which indicated deposits of kaolin, a refractory material, and other minerals that would become part of the remaining raw material for my work.

480km away from Asthua is the industrial township of Bokaro Steel City, where I lived for a good portion of my youth.  With many large furnaces used in steel production, refractory bricks were ubiquitous throughout the area.  This was a perfect setting for me to further my research of refractory materials, and I made a revelatory visit to the area called Ramgarh where they made refractory bricks for the steel factories.

click for detail


My first surprise was the discovery that beehive kilns were being used for this purpose. 
I had read that Jun Kaneko, the famous Japanese-American artist made monumental ceramic work and fired them in beehive kilns. How could they possibly be found in India as well, I wondered? 




Have a look:


10 meter diameter beehive kiln chamber. One can see the tall entrance, through which women would carry tall piles of bricks on their heads to load the kiln. The door would be bricked up and the shorter opening with grate that you see are the ports for burning fuel (coal). 









Notice the thick wall, the stacks of fired bricks for structure and raw brick stacks, and the flue on the ground, indicating that this is a downdraft kiln. The metal structure bracing the wall in place is in itself very intriguing.










One of the women worker seen here loading up the kiln. 












A closer look at the opening on the floor, flue hole, which formed a circle nearly six inches inside the wall. The bricks to be fired were stacked within the circle of the flue. 














A closer look at the firebox! The brick pile to the side would be used to shut this opening during the firing. Notice the grate and the colour of the metal reinforcement.










Approximately 30meter tall chimney for four such domes. Like many such operations, they would have one chamber loading up, one firing, one cooling, and one unloading on any given day. 










In this image, one sees the chimney to the left, another chamber straight ahead and one to the right. Do you see the round disk-like object leaning against the right chamber?  Thats an old damper! Under the ground is the channel which connects the flue to the chimney. A disk-like damper is used for monitoring the draft during firing. 
Needless to say, the chimney is never allowed to cool down!


The factory manager shared information about the sources for kaolin, ball clay and feldspar that was most needed for my quest. I returned home with a bunch of notes that are still sitting in a box at my family home, as yet untapped.  Since then, my life has brought me to Utah State University, where I continue to work.  I had not thought of this strange coincidence again until the recent Archie Bray Instagram post reminded me of this amazing discovery and inspired me to share!



I still wonder how it is possible that these kilns, with such similar designs, are found on opposite sides of the world?  Could the fact that both America and India were British colonies have something to do with it? My mind was, and still is, pondering this mystery...


Thanks for visiting!  Please feel free to comment, I would love to hear from you!




Wednesday, July 18, 2018

LUMINOUS - Thesis exhibition by Antra Sinha








                                                 















 
pc-Yurika Izumi
Entrance Tippets Gallery 75'x25' 











STATEMENT


As an observer, I have enjoyed the momentary happenings of the world. In India, I have watched shimmering waves from the shores of the Bay of Bengal. In Utah, I have admired gleaming sunlight on freshly fallen snow on the mountains. Peering into the kiln at peak temperature I have been in awe of the bright white light. Close to my heart I hold the significant memory of my dog’s passing, who laid in my lap as the ball of light escaped her. I gather these fleeting moments, and carry them into my studio. I relive these happenings in my mind. It leads me to investigate the basic and fundamental forms found in nature. The idea that all of earth’s creatures have common patterns of geometry and structure captivates me. Are there forms that can successfully convey these attributes? 

As a maker, I choose to use clay as my medium. As I sculpt and model clay, in turn, it shapes and molds me. I am drawn to vitreous porcelain because of the way in which it both absorbs and reflects light. I use many methods of construction, and embrace both traditional techniques and new technologies. On the one hand, I use my hands to build forms from coils of clay. On the other, I use aCNCmachine to create models and molds for slip casting. Both these processes are repetitive in nature, commanding my attention in ways that are both meditative and contemplative. Each presents challenges; each demands improvisation.

As I have been shaped by my experiences and surroundings. I have evolved. This journey has revealed much. I have learned much by making. I have had opportunities to both gather and to share information. The world is, of course, transient, but this exhibition expresses my understanding of the world at this moment in time. In a word, I find it – LUMINOUS.










   
pc-Dan Murphy
During my defense












https://soundcloud.com/megansimper
pls click on this link to listen to 
music composed for the exhibit












pc-Yurika Izumi
Informal look at the title








Music, you are listening to
“Luminous” as a concept piano piece by Megan Simper

It has been a pleasure to have conversations with Antra about craft, creation, and the
natural world that seem to move like ocean over shore, light on surface, and sound
through space - waves that explore, engage, and cause resonance and illumination. It
is an expression of both gratitude and esteem for this rare process of collaboration to
meet momentarily here, raw and unadorned.


& I am grateful


to Megan Simper for collaborating with her skills with music.
to my cohorts Christopher Watt, Tom Alward, Quinn Maher, Katy Dribjer, Jason Millward, Megan Thomas, Adam Leferbve, Matt Sloan, Christine Gronneberg, Ev Campbell, Charlie Cook for helping me in so many different ways that is hard to list, and learning together.
to Todd Hayes and Nick Lammay for being supportive with their technical expertise around
the studio.
to Madeline Walker, John Stein, Nicholas Danielson, Matthew Fiske for their time in suggesting ways to navigate graduate school.
to Becky Winstead, Tori Moss, Janet Hancock, Laura Gelfand, Fazilat Soukhakian for taking
good care of all the official things, and being great friends.
to Ryoichi Suzuki for guiding in various ways.
to Christopher Terry for trips to Germany.
to Maribeth Evensen Hengge for introducing me to Amrita Yoga Satsang
to Michael Sowder & Jennifer Sinor for being there.
to Sherrie Mitchell & Michelle Gerencser, Sushma Sharaf, Diane Oblock & Bill Oblock, Aatreyi Bal, Soodeh Dadras for being amazing friends.
to Yurika Izumi for being a caring roommate.
to Myles Howell who compliments sharing this thesis gallery space.
to my students who have unknowingly contributed to my experience.
to Dennise Gackstetter for being an amazing listener in my difficult times.
to Jackson Graham for bringing unique perspective in response to my work.
to Dan Murphy and John Neely for making it possible for me, to be part of this MFA program.
to all who, have touched my life in ways I have missed to mention.
Thank you all for many more things, that are not even possible to express in words.

to PROJECTS GALLERY space for display and experimentation.
to IDEA FACTORY for allowing the use of facilities.
to MFA PROGRAM the way requirements are organized.
to CAINE COLLEGE OF THE ARTS for being in existence.
to UTAH STATE UNIVERISTY for Art-STEM Fellowship, without it, I couldn’t be here












pc-Andrew Mcallister
Title and four panels









 
pc-Andrew Mcallister
with Head of the Department
Laura Gelfand











pc-Andrew Mcallister
Fibonacci Interpretation I





               

pc-Michael Sowder
Detail











pc-Jennifer Sinor
View of the east wall













 
pc-Andrew Mcallister
Vibrance











   
pc-Yurika Izumi
Detail







   
pc-Caroline Lavoie
evening of Reception















pc-Andrew Mcallister
Cascade
















pc-Michael Sowder
Detail 












pc-Michael Sowder
Detail













pc-Jennifer Sinor
evening of Reception










pc-Andrew Mcallister
Platonic Solids










pc-Michael Sowder
Detail 



















 
pc-Andrew Mcallister
Hexagons Squares & Triangles













  
pc-Michael Sowder
Relinquish











pc-Andrew Mcallister
Detail











pc-Yurika Izumi
Detail














 
pc-Michael Sowder
Detail 














 
pc-Andrew Mcallister
Fibonacci Interpretation II
















pc-Jennifer Sinor
Detail















   
pc-Andrew Mcallister
evening of Reception























 
pc-Andrew Mcallister
Kekule's Macromolecule I














    
pc-Michael Sowder
Detail





















 
pc-Andrew Mcallister
Kekule's Macromolecule II











 
pc-Yurika Izumi
Detail
























 
pc-Andrew Mcallister
Hive Interpreted Tealight




















   
pc-Yurika Izumi
Detail
























pc-Michael Sowder
Detail












































Waves





















evening of Reception






 
pc-Todd Johnstone
Wave-panorama











pc-Michael Sowder
Detail















































































with Jennifer Sinor & Jennifer Peeples





















with Jennifer Sinor and Michael Sowder








































































with Cory Brown





















With John Neely, Dennise Gackstetter & Dan Murphy










Thanks for viewing.