A fully illustrated examination of the use of color in clay, outlining its history and exploring the styles and techniques of the leading modern makers. A fully illustrated examination of the use of color in clay, outlining its history and exploring the styles and techniques of the leading modern makers.
Mix two or more colors of clay as part of a piece's design, and you are creating nerikomi. There are many techniques – stacking, stretching, slicing – but with nerikomi, the decoration is built and fired into the work's very fabric, rather than glazing it later. This beautifully illustrated introduction by accomplished nerikomi specialist Thomas Hoadley includes:
– A brief history of the origins and international styles of colored clay
– A section dedicated to the most honored Japanese Masters of nerikomi
– Stunning examples of work from the world's leading experts
– Step-by-step examples of many of the techniques employed
Whether you simply enjoy the beauty of multicolored clay, or are seeking inspiration, this essential volume contains everything you need to embark on your own nerikomi projects.
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A fully illustrated examination of the use of color in clay, outlining its history and exploring the styles and techniques of the leading modern makers.
Preface
A Colorful History
Early Chinese and Korean Colored Clay Ceramics
Agateware
Twentieth-century Japan
Japanese Masters
Matsui Kosei Ito Sekisui V Ogata Kamio Kondo Takahiro Nishi Koichi
The Nerikomi Technique: One Artist's Approach
Colored Clay Worldwide
Hans Munck Andersen Janny Baek Curtis Benzle Angela Burkhardt-Guallini
Mandy Cheng Ben Davies Mieke Everaet Dorothy Feibleman Barbara
Gittings Robert Hessler Cody Hoyt Narumi Ii Francoise Joris Maria
ten Kortenaar Judy McKenzie Anne Mossman Aya Murata Jongjin Park
David Pottinger Kanako Sahashi Lorraine Shemesh Tsuneharu Tanaka
Larissa Warren Dorothee Wenz Lotte Westphael Henk Wolvers
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Glossary
Thomas Hoadley: Resume and Publications
Index
Thomas Hoadley apprenticed with Vermont potter Malcolm Wright, who brought Japanese Karatsu-style wood-fired pottery techniques to the United States. Hoadley later established a pottery studio in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts. He holds a Special Judges Award from the 2011 International Ceramics Festival Mino, Japan; his work was featured at the White House in Washington D.C. and is included in the collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts among many others.