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“Testimonial Urn II,” 18.75 in. (48 cm) in height, stoneware, with layered slips, salt fired to Cone 8–10, 2005.

October 1, 2007

Uniting Layers of Content and Form

by Todd Turek | Read Comments (0)

In today’s Ceramic Arts Daily, Paul McCoy explains how he unites content and form while creating his complexly layered vessels.

Background
Influences
Processes
Body of work

BACKGROUND
Paul McCoy, an artist and educator working extensively within the vessel tradition, has developed imagery that is both personal and expressive in an attempt to unite content and form. The ability of the vessel form to connect with the past and present, the agrarian and the industrial are among the ideas that McCoy strives to articulate in his work.

INFLUENCES
McCoy’s work also draws significantly from his life in the environs of central Texas, an area where the vegetation becomes brown and brittle, and the earth becomes a cracked and parched carpet. McCoy effectively conveys his working environment through densely configured slipped surfaces that are often washed with iron stain prior to their exposure to the sodium vapor or the wood-fire fly ash of the firing process.

PROCESSES
100107_paul-mccoy2_CAP.jpgMcCoy uses a measured conservatism of form to provide formal support for his extensive layering of surface imagery through the use of paddling, internal and external altering, and the application of deflocculated slips. Recessed marks and raised patterns reminiscent of scarred trees, fault lines, tread imprints, and road configurations are often partially buried under dozens of layers of deflocculated slips. His decision to resolve the forms through wood- and salt-firing is McCoy’s attempt to achieve one additional visual layer which supports and extends the underlying structures without obliterating crucial content.

BODY OF WORK

The monolithic “Urn” series shares a geologic and human content with his intimately scaled teabowls. Although the two types of work address very different contextual histories of the vessel, both rely extensively on levels of surface manipulation, slip layering and the marks of the sodium vapor and wood-firing processes to charge the works with a dramatic visual weight.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
See a term you weren’t quite sure of? Then visit the Ceramic Arts Daily Glossary.

ON WEDNESDAY
Read about Paul McCoy's use of
deflocculated slip to build up and color the surfaces of his pieces.



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