La Mia Ceramica (gebundenes Buch)
La mia ceramica
(Auszug aus dem Text von Edmund de Waal)
Clay becomes ceramic when it is fired. When clay is still in its raw state it can be broken down, mixed with water, reconstituted: objects can be made and remade indefinitely. Its plasticity is almost dangerous, it allows for revision and effacement. It has little resistance in comparison with wood or stone. Every touch is present but contingent. After firing, clay becomes other – it can be broken, chipped, made fragmentary – but it cannot return to its primal state. It is now unalterable, holding a record of the movements that made it: it is terramottata ma ferma, ‘earthquaked but motionless’, in Fontana’s vivid words. Clay and ceramic are polarised states of being, motion and stasis...
Clay is inexhaustible stuff. It is cheap. It has little value in the hierarchy of materials: it is demotic, basic, primal. It is earth. As earth, it is universal but also particular as it comes out of territory, land, place. To work with it is to make something out of nothing. It is an act of Ur-creation: ‘God gave man a little bit of mud’, in Gauguin’s words. Clay records the passage of one moment of one person through the world. The use of clay to sketch, to mark in an abbreviated way the flux of feeling, is part of this map of the unexpected...
Transformation takes place at different levels of seriousness, humour and complexity. But at every stage there are decisions as to whether to adopt the technics of ceramics. As Fontana said in the essay he wrote in 1939: ‘I abhor the mystics of technique… I am looking for something else.’
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In Zusammenarbeit mit Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin | Paris