The Clay Canvas
By Irene Wittig
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About this ebook
Painting on ceramics is an art accessible to everyone. Whether you are a potter, painter, or hobbyist, you'll discover that free-hand creative painting on ceramics will add an extra dimension to your work. By making items aesthetic as well as functional, you'll personalize your environment and create one-of-a-kind gifts for family and friends.
Clear, step-by-step instructions for the whole ceramic process are combined with suggestions for finding inspiration in a variety of source materials. Color photographs illustrate the professional results you can achieve..
Irene Wittig's designs and articles appeared in a variety of ceramic and craft publications, and he work is in private collections around the world.
Irene Wittig
Irene Wittig was born in Rome to a Viennese mother and Italian father, ten days after it was liberated by Allied forces. She arrived in the U.S. via Argentina, and grew up in New York, in a neighborhood of Holocaust survivors and fellow Europeans displaced by war whose stories she absorbed. After studying in New York, Germany and Maryland she worked for the Dept. of Defense in Washington, DC before moving to Naples, Italy where she lived for five years. Later, she and her husband spent six years in Switzerland. After twenty years as a ceramic painter and teacher, Irene turned to writing. She and her husband have two children and four grandchildren and live in Arlington, Virginia. She enjoys hearing from her readers.
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The Clay Canvas - Irene Wittig
INTRODUCTION
It has been twenty years since Clay Canvas was published. The ideas behind it and the techniques to achieve these ideas have not changed, but what has changed is the internet, and the business of ceramics. Paint-your-own-pottery studios are now found throughout the country, yet there are far fewer magazines and ceramic supply shops. Old, and sometimes favorite, underglaze colors are no longer available; yet new colors, that once seemed impossible to achieve as underglazes, are now readily available. Today, the internet makes it possible to find, view and purchase all the colors, glazes and supplies you will need no matter where you live, so I have eliminated the Resources section of the old edition. The internet has also changed the marketing and business aspects of ceramic painting.
To inspire you I have added a Gallery section with photographs of a wide variety of handpainted ceramics.
Irene Wittig
Arlington, Virginia
March 2011
Chapter 1
THE DELIGHTS OF A CLAY CANVAS
I fell head over heels in love with the colorful handpainted ceramics of southern Italy when we lived in Naples. Sitting on our balcony, drinking rich and fragrant coffee out of cups splashed with handpainted flowers, I often looked out over the bay and pictured the little ceramic factories along the coast that we had become so familiar with. And there, right under Mount Vesuvius, I could almost see the shop of Signor Deo.
Signor Deo was an elderly gentleman who owned a little ceramic shop in the industrial town of San Giovanni, half-way between Naples and Pompeii. I discovered his talents through my friend Christina, who was working at an orphanage nearby. Signor Deo, she told me with delight, didn’t just sell ceramics; he was an artist who painted anything you desired on tiles. He painted scenes from his imagination or your photographs. I was enchanted and found myself buying his ceramic paintings for everyone - scenes of the hillside houses of Capri, of terracotta pots overflowing with flowers, of medieval churches in alpine villages. I visited often, watching him work in a little corner at the back of his shop. I asked many questions. The colors he used seemed indistinguishable from each other until they were glazed and fired. How could he predict his results so well? It just takes practice, he said.
I didn't think of practicing for myself at that time. I was intimidated by those mystery colors. Besides, it didn't seem necessary. I was surrounded by an abundance of inexpensive and wonderful, colorful, handpainted ceramics. My husband and I spent many a day browsing through the ceramic factories in Vietri and the shops along the Amalfi coast. As we traveled around other areas of Italy, we admired the variety of styles we found: from modern to traditional, from primitive folk-art designs to sophisticated copies of Renaissance masterpieces. We bought many presents, of course, and brought home some more unique and contemporary pieces for ourselves. But when we were back in the United States what we missed most, was the magic and the art of the everyday ceramics of southern Italy. We regretted not bringing home more of those traditional ceramics that had seemed so common then. At first, I thought it would be easy enough to find them here too. But it wasn't - not then. I craved some colorful, handpainted little mugs to hold my espresso and feed my nostalgia.
Then one day, a couple of years later, I happened to talk to a ceramist who had worked for Wheaton Glass in its now defunct china factory in Millville, New Jersey and now ran its outlet store. In the back of the store she had set up a small ceramic workshop where she decorated and sold the unglazed bisqueware left over from the factory. I still pined for some handpainted mugs and asked her how she decorated the bisque, remembering Signor Deo's mystery colors. Unlike Signor Deo, she used concentrated one-stroke underglazes which looked unglazed much like they look glazed and fired. I was thrilled at this discovery.
Just take this bisque mug,
she said paint on it with these underglazes. and then glaze and fire it.
She left out a couple of steps, I was to discover, but the door had been opened. In short order I had my mugs, painted with my interpretation of those remembered Italian designs. Soon I had to do some for my friends; after which my friends had me paint mugs, bowls and plates for their friends. One asked if I could do something special for a friend who made delicate cloth sculptures of flying animals. I painted a platter of my own design on which mythological creatures danced. And so it was that, within a year of making my little mugs, I was in business. Although my first pieces were simple and my brushstrokes a bit unpracticed, the more I painted the easier it got. And the more I painted the more ideas I had. The ideas were the best part.
But things aren’t made up of only best parts. After my initial conversation with the ceramist in New Jersey, I found specific information and answers to questions hard to obtain. I didn’t quite fit into any category: I wasn’t a potter, and I wasn’t doing the usual hobby ceramics. I wasn’t even considered a craftsperson, because I didn’t handcraft the pieces. Painters painted on canvases of cloth or paper. Craftspersons and artists, afraid that their ideas will be stolen, are often reluctant to share techniques except under the protective umbrella of a guild or artists’ group. There was no easily identifiable group for me to join and what I really wanted and needed was somewhere to go for technical advice, and someone to share ideas with. Then suddenly I found both: first a friendly ceramic shop to help with the technical problems, and then Diane Herbort, an innovative needlework and quilt designer, who was kind enough to move in next door. Diane was endlessly generous with her ideas, her books, her supplies, and most important, her time. With this book I would like to return the favor, since not everyone can have a Diane next door.
If you are thinking that there are already many imaginative handpainted ceramics available – made in Italy, France, Portugal and Mexico, for instance – that you can (and should!) place in every room of your house, remember that they can’t complete with the ones you’ll make yourself.
Those of you who think you can't paint will find that painting on ceramics with underglazes is an art accessible to everyone. It is much less intimidating than oil or watercolor painting; easier, quicker and more spontaneous than china painting. Although it is hard to correct painting mistakes, it is actually a very forgiving medium. Precision in painting is just a style, not a requirement. Primitiveness can add to the charm. There are no restrictions