‘Reconstituting the Four Quarters: Porcelain Surfaces and Embodied Identities’' ‘Reconstituting the Four Quarters: Porcelain Surfaces and Embodied Identities’ DMU Leicester 3-/-0/20183-/-0/2018
Abstract
The overall context for this work and future work I will undertake; is that the work deals with the political, social and cultural contradictions we face every day. It uses technology both as a philosophical tool to reflect on objects and as a poetic means to document our personal and collective life struggles in the 21st century.
The objects themselves, have surfaces, these surfaces have roles, the role of surfaces in this context is their historical contexts, before thinking about how I have worked with these surfaces to decontextualize these objects for a contemporary audience.
Created in Plymouth in 1768 or 1769, these figurines were the work of William Cookworthy who, having started his professional life as a chemist, made it his mission to try to create the first truly ‘English’ porcelain in the latter half of the eighteenth century. At this time, there was a sharp distinction between the fine porcelain produced in China using ‘kaolin’ clay, which was called ‘hard paste’ and the imitation ‘China’, which used a different type of clay, and was worked using a ‘soft paste’ method in European centres of production. Cookworthy’s experiments, using a body of clay found in Cornwall that was similar to the kaolin used in Chinese porcelain production, resulted in a successful patent application to produce English porcelain at the founding of the Plymouth Porcelain manufactory in the mid-1760s.
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