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{{Short description|Machine used in the shaping of round ceramic ware}} | |||
The '''potter's wheel''' is a horizontal ] or ] used in the making of many types of ]. | |||
{{For|the magazine named The Potter's Wheel|The Potters (artists group)}} | |||
{{More citations needed|date=November 2023}} | |||
{{Use British English|date=March 2017}} | |||
], ]]] | |||
]]] | |||
In ], a '''potter's wheel''' is a machine used in the shaping (known as throwing) of ] into round ] ware. The wheel may also be used during the process of trimming excess clay from ] dried ware that is stiff but malleable, and for applying incised decoration or rings of colour. Use of the potter's wheel became widespread throughout the ] but was unknown in the ] ], where pottery was handmade by methods that included ] and beating. | |||
A potter's wheel may occasionally be referred to as a "potter's ]". However, that term is better used for another kind of machine that is used for a different shaping process, ], similar to that used for shaping of metal and wooden articles. The pottery wheel is an important component to create arts and craft products.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Sophia |first1=Sophia |title=Best Pottery Wheel |url=https://www.bestcrafterstudio.com/best-pottery-wheels/ |website=Best Crafter Studio |access-date=27 August 2022}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | ] | ||
The techniques of '''jiggering''' and '''jolleying''' can be seen as extensions of the potter's wheel: in jiggering, a shaped tool is slowly brought down onto the plastic ] body that has been placed on top of the rotating ] ]. The jigger tool shapes one face, the mould the other. The term is specific to the shaping of ], such as plates, whilst a similar technique, jolleying, refers to the production of ], such as cups. | |||
== History == | == History == | ||
{{multiple image|width=200 | |||
The exact time and place of the first development of the potter's wheel is uncertain. Suggested dates range from as early as the ] to the as late as the ]. Many modern scholars suggest development in ], although ] and ] have also been claimed as the potter's wheel's place of origin. | |||
|image1=CucuteniModelingSystem.svg|caption1=A graphic representation of a primitive rotating pottery wheel made of clay and positioned on the ground, based on archaeological finds in ] | |||
|image2=CucuteniPotteryTable.svg|caption2=A graphic depiction of an ancient potter's wheel proposed by archaeologist Ștefan Cucoș, based on the findings in {{ill|Văleni, Harghita|lt=Valeni|ro}}, ] and ] in Romania}} | |||
Prior to using a wheel all of these civilizations used techniques such as pinching, coiling, paddling, and shaping to create ceramic forms. In addition, several of these techniques continued to be used on pots on or off the wheel to decorate or create more rounded or symmetrical shapes. | |||
In any case, use became widespread in the early civilizations of the ]. | |||
Most early ceramic ware was hand-built using a simple ] technique in which clay was rolled into long threads that were then pinched and smoothed together to form the body of a vessel. In the coiling method of construction, all the energy required to form the main part of a piece is supplied indirectly by the hands of the potter. Early ceramics built by coiling were often placed on mats or large leaves to allow them to be worked more conveniently. The evidence of this lies in mat or leaf impressions left in the clay of the base of the pot. This arrangement allowed the potter to rotate the vessel during construction, rather than walk around it to add coils of clay. | |||
The earliest versions of the wheel were simply turned slowly by hand or foot while coiling a pot. Later developments allowed the wheel to keep rotating as a ], allowing more symetrical pots to be more swiftly formed. | |||
The oldest forms of the potter's wheel (called ''tourneys'' or ''slow wheels'') were probably developed as an extension to this procedure. Tournettes, in use around 3500 BC in the ], were turned slowly by hand or by foot while coiling a pot. Only a small range of vessels were fashioned on the tournette, suggesting that it was used by a limited number of potters.<ref>{{cite journal|first1=Valentine|last1=Roux|first2=Pierre|last2=Miroschedji|title=Revisiting the History of the Potter's Wheel in the Southern Levant|journal=Levant|volume=41|issue=2|date=2009|pages=155–173|doi=10.1179/007589109X12484491671095|s2cid=162097444}}</ref> The introduction of the slow wheel increased the efficiency of hand-powered pottery production. | |||
By the ] a variation had developed with of a turntable about a meter above the floor, connected by a long ] to a heavy lower wheel on the ground. This allowed the potter to keep the wheel in rotation by kicking it with his or her foot, leaving both hands completely free for molding the pot. | |||
In the mid to late 3rd millennium BC the ''fast wheel'' was developed, which operated on the ] principle. It utilised ] stored in the rotating ] of the heavy stone wheel itself to speed the process. This wheel was wound up and charged with energy by kicking, or pushing it around with a stick, providing ]. The fast wheel enabled a new process of pottery-making to develop, called ''throwing'', in which a lump of clay was placed centrally on the wheel and then squeezed, lifted and shaped as the wheel turned. The process tends to leave rings on the inside of the pot and can be used to create thinner-walled pieces and a wider variety of shapes, including stemmed vessels, so wheel-thrown pottery can be distinguished from handmade. Potters could now produce many more pots per hour, a first step towards ]. | |||
The potter's wheel became commonly known throughout the ], but was unknown in the ] in ] times; all ] pottery before the arrival of the Europeans was made without use of the wheel. | |||
⚫ | |||
], ], using a hand-powered wheel, 2003]] | |||
Many modern scholars suggest that the first potter's wheel was first developed by the ancient ]ians in ].<ref name=Kramer1963>{{cite book|last=Kramer|first=Samuel Noah|date=1963|title=The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IuxIdug8DBUC|publisher=University of Chicago Press|location=Chicago, Illinois|isbn=0-226-45238-7|page=290}}</ref> A stone potter's wheel found at the Sumerian city of ] in modern-day ] has been dated to about 3129 BC,<ref name=Moorey1994>{{cite book|last=Moorey|first=Peter Roger Stuart|date=1999|orig-year=1994|title=Ancient Mesopotamian Materials and Industries: The Archaeological Evidence|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_Ixuott4doC|location=Winona Lake, Indiana|publisher=Eisenbrauns|isbn=9781575060422|page=146}}</ref> but fragments of wheel-thrown pottery of an even earlier date have been recovered in the same area.<ref name=Moorey1994/> However, ]<ref>{{Cite journal | last = Cucoș | first = Ștefan | title = Faza Cucuteni B în zona subcarpatică a Moldovei |trans-title=Cucuteni B period in the lower Carpathian region of Moldova | journal = Bibliotheca Memoriae Antiquitatis (BMA) (Memorial Library Antiquities) | volume = 6 | publisher = Muzeul de Istorie Piatra Neamț (Historical Museum Piatra Neamț) | location = Piatra Neamț, Romania | year = 1999 | url = http://www.neamt.ro/cmj/istorie/piatra-neamt/BMA_2.html | language = ro | oclc = 223302267}}</ref> and ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://xsrb.xsnet.cn/html/2009-08/06/content_78846.htm|title=<span lang="zh">萧山日报-数字报纸</span>|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110707051846/http://xsrb.xsnet.cn/html/2009-08/06/content_78846.htm|archive-date=2011-07-07}}</ref> have also been claimed as possible places of origin. A potter's wheel in ], from the ], has been dated to the middle of the 5th millennium BC, and is the oldest ever found, and which further precedes the earliest use of the potter's wheel in Mesopotamia by several hundred years.<ref name=":03">{{Cite book |last=Haarmann |first=Harald |author-link=Harald Haarmann |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FkL_DwAAQBAJ&dq=danube+river+civilization+potter%27s+wheel&pg=PA40 |title=Advancement in Ancient Civilizations: Life, Culture, Science and Thought |publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers |year=2020 |isbn=978-1-4766-4075-4 |location=Jefferson, North Carolina |pages=40 |language=en}}</ref> On the other hand, ] is considered as "being the place of origin of the potter's wheel. It was here that the turntable shaft was lengthened about 3000 BC and a flywheel added. The flywheel was kicked and later was moved by pulling the edge with the left hand while forming the clay with the right. This led to the ] motion for the potter's wheel which is almost universal."<ref>{{cite book|first1=Frank|last1=Hamer|first2=Janet|last2=Hamer|date=2004|title=The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques|page=383}}</ref> Thus, the exact origin of the wheel is not wholly clear yet. | |||
⚫ | ] | ||
Since the ], ] driven potter's wheels have become common, although human powered ones are still in use. Motorization does not significantly change the amount of skill needed to use a potter's wheel. The wheel is much more diffcult to use and to master fully than other ceramic techniques such as the pinched pot or coils. | |||
In the ], the potter's wheel in common use had a turning platform about {{convert|1|m|ft|0|abbr=off|spell=in}} over the floor, connected by a long ] to a heavy flywheel at ground level. This arrangement allowed the potter to keep the turning wheel rotating by kicking the flywheel with the foot, leaving both hands free for manipulating the vessel under construction. However, from an ] standpoint, sweeping the foot from side to side against the spinning hub is rather awkward. At some point{{when|date=April 2021}}, an alternative solution was invented that involved a ] with a ] that converted up-and-down motion into rotary motion. | |||
In Japan the potter's wheel first showed by in the Asuka or Sueki period (552–710 CE) where wares were more sophisticated and complicated. In addition to the new technology of the wheel, firing was also changed to a much higher temperature in a rudimentary kiln. The industrialization continued through the Nara period (710–794) and into the Heian, or Fujiwara, period (794–1185). With higher temperature firings, new glazes followed (green, yellowish brown, and white), in addition new styles and techniques of glazing emerged. <ref>{{Cite web |title=Japanese pottery {{!}} History, Styles & Techniques {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/art/Japanese-pottery |access-date=2023-10-08 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | == The potter's wheel in myth |
||
⚫ | In Ancient ], the ] ] was said to have formed the first ]s on a potter's wheel. | ||
Ceramic wares that emerged from China were processed with a very similar beginning as Japan. The history of Chinese pottery began in the ] about 4300 BC down to 2000 BC. Unlike Japan, which focused on production of everyday wares, China created mostly decorative pieces with few opportunities for industrialization and production of ceramic wares. Because China focused on decorative wares, most of their pottery was centered around porcelain instead of earthen wares seem almost everywhere else, and they used the potter's wheel for the development of porcelain clay culture. Porcelain took off during the ] and the ] (1644-1911), when the iconic blue and white porcelain ceramics emerged. Several places in China mix traditional elements and methods with modern design and technologies. <ref>{{Cite web |title=A Potted History of Chinese Ceramics |url=https://www.thechinaguide.com/blog/a-potted-history-of-chinese-ceramics#:~:text=In%20the%20late%20Neolithic%20period,modern-day%20Xi'an. |access-date=2023-10-16 |website=www.thechinaguide.com}}</ref> | |||
== The potter's wheel in literature == | |||
] | |||
The way in which clay is shaped on a potter's wheel seems, even today, to have a magical quality to it; the clay has the appearance of being a living thing that is being created or shaped by the potter. The potter and his clay have long served as a metaphor for creation, and for the relationship of God to humankind: | |||
Native Americans have been creating ceramics by hand and in more modern eras started incorporating a wheel into their work. Pottery can be identified in the Southwest of North American dating back to 150 CE and has been an important part of Native American culture for over 2,000 years. <ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=The History and Significance of Southwestern Native American Pottery |url=https://www.shopgarlands.com/blogs/news/the-history-and-significance-of-southwestern-native-american-pottery |access-date=2023-10-16 |website=Garland |language=en}}</ref> Historically Native Americans have been using the coiling method to achieve their decorative and functional pieces, and the technology to create an electric wheel did not show up until the arrival of Europeans. However, smaller turntables or slow wheels could have been used occasionally. <ref>{{Cite web |title=Pottery - Native American, Clay, Art {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/art/pottery/American-Indian-pottery |access-date=2023-10-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> | |||
The use of the ]-driven wheel has become common in modern times, particularly with craft potters and educational institutions, although human-powered ones are still in use and are preferred by some ]. {{Clear}} | |||
:But now, O LORD, thou art our father; we are the clay, and thou our potter; and we all are the work of thy hand. | |||
::—Isaiah 64:8 | |||
== Industrialization == | |||
The ] make sustained use of this metaphor. In ]'s translation, a number of quatrains are collected into a Book of Pots, in which the pots engage in theological speculation: | |||
] | |||
Social consequences that can arrive of these technological advancements include increased economic advancements in the sales of pottery created using the potter’s wheel and industrialization of the ceramics processes. The potter’s wheel greatly increased the production rate of ceramics, which allowed for more products to be created. With the industrialization of ceramics in Japan, ceramics also lost some of its historical value, and some techniques and meanings of the ceramics were lost in the process.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Mishima |first=Yasuo |date=1955 |title=THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN POTTERY IN JAPAN-SETO AND NAGOYA- |url=https://repository.kulib.kyoto-u.ac.jp/dspace/handle/2433/125419 |journal=Kyoto University Economic Review |volume=25 |issue=2 |pages=31–49 |doi=10.11179/ker1926.25.2_31 |issn=0023-6055}}</ref> | |||
== Techniques of throwing == | |||
<!-- This formatting nicely in all browsers; the wiki-colon markup does not; please do not change ---> | |||
] | |||
And, strange to tell, among that Earthen Lot<br> | |||
Some could articulate, while others not:<br> | |||
] living historical museum]] | |||
And suddenly one more impatient cried—<br> | |||
A skilled potter can quickly throw a vessel from up to {{convert|15|kg|lb|-1|abbr=on}} of clay.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/15323|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080912053658/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/15323|url-status=dead|archive-date=2008-09-12|publisher=BFI|website=Film & TV Database|title=Isaac Button – Country Potter (1965)}}</ref> Alternatively, by throwing a vessel and adding coils of clay then throwing again, pots may be made even taller, with the heat of a ] being used to firm each thrown section before adding the next coil.<ref>{{Cite web |last1=art |first1=Tags |last2=arts |last3=bottles |last4=Theory |first4=Ceramic |last5=ceramics |last6=Throwing |first6=Coil |last7=Ceramics |first7=Contextualising |last8=Gothenburg |last9=HDK |date=2013-03-29 |title=Coil throwing |url=https://jackwelbourneceramics.wordpress.com/2013/03/29/coil-throwing/ |access-date=2024-09-30 |website=Jack Welbourne Ceramics |language=en}}</ref> Similarly, multiple sections may be thrown and combined to create large vessels.<ref>{{Cite web |title=How to Throw Large Pots in Sections on the Potters Wheel |url=https://ceramicartsnetwork.org/daily/article/Wheel-Throwing-Video-How-to-Throw-a-Large-Vase-on-the-Pottery-Wheel |access-date=2024-09-30 |website=Default |language=en}}</ref> Large wheels and masses of clay can also allow for multiple people to work on a pot simultaneously, which can create very large ceramic pieces. This practice is used in Jingdezhen, China, where 3 or more potters may work on one pot at the same time. <ref>{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=oJYwPY7LGGc |title=Huge Piece of Pottery Takes 3 Men To Sculpt |date=2016-07-05 |last=Insider |access-date=2024-09-30 |via=YouTube}}</ref> | |||
“Who is the Potter, pray, and who the Pot?”<br> | |||
There are a variety of methods to throwing, though almost all involve the following steps in some form: center the clay on the wheel, open a hole in the clay, creating a donut shaped ring of clay around the base of the pot, then raise or shape the walls to create the pots final shape. <ref>{{Cite web |title=Guide to Ceramic Wheel Throwing |url=https://www.thecrucible.org/guides/ceramics/wheel-throwing/ |access-date=2024-09-30 |website=The Crucible |language=en-US}}</ref> The specifics of these steps, including the motions of the hands, can vary from culture to culture, as well as from potter to potter. In most cultures, the wheel spins counterclockwise and the right hand is placed on the outside of the pot as it is thrown. Japanese pottery is thrown oppositely, with the wheel spinning clockwise and the right hand on the interior of the pot. <ref>{{Cite web |last=david.hamel |date=2023-04-07 |title=Differences in Western and Japanese Pottery Aesthetics - Dave Hamel's Website |url=https://www.davehamel.com/2023/04/07/differences-in-western-and-japanese-pottery-aesthetics/ |access-date=2024-09-30 |language=en-US}}</ref> However, modern wheels powered by electric motors often allow for rotation in either direction, allowing the potter to choose which direction works best for their technique, hand dominance and personal preferences. <ref>{{Cite web |title=How to center clay on the pottery wheel {{!}} TeachinArt |url=https://www.teachinart.com/blog/how-to-center-clay-on-the-pottery-wheel |access-date=2024-09-30 |website=TeachinArt.com |language=en}}</ref> | |||
Another said—“Why, ne'er a peevish Boy,<br> | |||
“Would break the Bowl from which he drank in Joy;<br> | |||
⚫ | == The potter's wheel in myth == | ||
“Shall He that made the vessel in pure Love<br> | |||
⚫ | In Ancient ], the ] ] was said to have formed the first ]s on a potter's wheel. | ||
“And Fancy, in an after Rage destroy?”<br> | |||
{{Clear}} | |||
⚫ | |||
None answer'd this; but after Silence spake<br> | |||
== See also == | |||
A Vessel of a more ungainly Make:<br> | |||
* ], industrial metal fabrication machine with an operation reminiscent of a potter's wheel | |||
“They sneer at me for leaning all awry;<br> | |||
“What! did the Hand then of the Potter shake?”<br> | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
{{Commons|Potter's wheel|Potter's wheel}} | |||
* multi-page article on Ceramics Today site | |||
*] (video on ]) | |||
{{Pottery}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Potter's Wheel}} | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 20:15, 12 December 2024
Machine used in the shaping of round ceramic ware For the magazine named The Potter's Wheel, see The Potters (artists group).This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Potter's wheel" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (November 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
In pottery, a potter's wheel is a machine used in the shaping (known as throwing) of clay into round ceramic ware. The wheel may also be used during the process of trimming excess clay from leather-hard dried ware that is stiff but malleable, and for applying incised decoration or rings of colour. Use of the potter's wheel became widespread throughout the Old World but was unknown in the Pre-Columbian New World, where pottery was handmade by methods that included coiling and beating.
A potter's wheel may occasionally be referred to as a "potter's lathe". However, that term is better used for another kind of machine that is used for a different shaping process, turning, similar to that used for shaping of metal and wooden articles. The pottery wheel is an important component to create arts and craft products.
The techniques of jiggering and jolleying can be seen as extensions of the potter's wheel: in jiggering, a shaped tool is slowly brought down onto the plastic clay body that has been placed on top of the rotating plaster mould. The jigger tool shapes one face, the mould the other. The term is specific to the shaping of flat ware, such as plates, whilst a similar technique, jolleying, refers to the production of hollow ware, such as cups.
History
A graphic representation of a primitive rotating pottery wheel made of clay and positioned on the ground, based on archaeological finds in RomaniaA graphic depiction of an ancient potter's wheel proposed by archaeologist Ștefan Cucoș, based on the findings in Valeni [ro], Feliceni and Ghelăiești in RomaniaPrior to using a wheel all of these civilizations used techniques such as pinching, coiling, paddling, and shaping to create ceramic forms. In addition, several of these techniques continued to be used on pots on or off the wheel to decorate or create more rounded or symmetrical shapes.
Most early ceramic ware was hand-built using a simple coiling technique in which clay was rolled into long threads that were then pinched and smoothed together to form the body of a vessel. In the coiling method of construction, all the energy required to form the main part of a piece is supplied indirectly by the hands of the potter. Early ceramics built by coiling were often placed on mats or large leaves to allow them to be worked more conveniently. The evidence of this lies in mat or leaf impressions left in the clay of the base of the pot. This arrangement allowed the potter to rotate the vessel during construction, rather than walk around it to add coils of clay.
The oldest forms of the potter's wheel (called tourneys or slow wheels) were probably developed as an extension to this procedure. Tournettes, in use around 3500 BC in the Near East, were turned slowly by hand or by foot while coiling a pot. Only a small range of vessels were fashioned on the tournette, suggesting that it was used by a limited number of potters. The introduction of the slow wheel increased the efficiency of hand-powered pottery production.
In the mid to late 3rd millennium BC the fast wheel was developed, which operated on the flywheel principle. It utilised energy stored in the rotating mass of the heavy stone wheel itself to speed the process. This wheel was wound up and charged with energy by kicking, or pushing it around with a stick, providing angular momentum. The fast wheel enabled a new process of pottery-making to develop, called throwing, in which a lump of clay was placed centrally on the wheel and then squeezed, lifted and shaped as the wheel turned. The process tends to leave rings on the inside of the pot and can be used to create thinner-walled pieces and a wider variety of shapes, including stemmed vessels, so wheel-thrown pottery can be distinguished from handmade. Potters could now produce many more pots per hour, a first step towards industrialization.
Many modern scholars suggest that the first potter's wheel was first developed by the ancient Sumerians in Mesopotamia. A stone potter's wheel found at the Sumerian city of Ur in modern-day Iraq has been dated to about 3129 BC, but fragments of wheel-thrown pottery of an even earlier date have been recovered in the same area. However, southeastern Europe and China have also been claimed as possible places of origin. A potter's wheel in western Ukraine, from the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture, has been dated to the middle of the 5th millennium BC, and is the oldest ever found, and which further precedes the earliest use of the potter's wheel in Mesopotamia by several hundred years. On the other hand, Egypt is considered as "being the place of origin of the potter's wheel. It was here that the turntable shaft was lengthened about 3000 BC and a flywheel added. The flywheel was kicked and later was moved by pulling the edge with the left hand while forming the clay with the right. This led to the counterclockwise motion for the potter's wheel which is almost universal." Thus, the exact origin of the wheel is not wholly clear yet.
In the Iron Age, the potter's wheel in common use had a turning platform about one metre (3 feet) over the floor, connected by a long axle to a heavy flywheel at ground level. This arrangement allowed the potter to keep the turning wheel rotating by kicking the flywheel with the foot, leaving both hands free for manipulating the vessel under construction. However, from an ergonomic standpoint, sweeping the foot from side to side against the spinning hub is rather awkward. At some point, an alternative solution was invented that involved a crankshaft with a lever that converted up-and-down motion into rotary motion.
In Japan the potter's wheel first showed by in the Asuka or Sueki period (552–710 CE) where wares were more sophisticated and complicated. In addition to the new technology of the wheel, firing was also changed to a much higher temperature in a rudimentary kiln. The industrialization continued through the Nara period (710–794) and into the Heian, or Fujiwara, period (794–1185). With higher temperature firings, new glazes followed (green, yellowish brown, and white), in addition new styles and techniques of glazing emerged.
Ceramic wares that emerged from China were processed with a very similar beginning as Japan. The history of Chinese pottery began in the Neolithic era about 4300 BC down to 2000 BC. Unlike Japan, which focused on production of everyday wares, China created mostly decorative pieces with few opportunities for industrialization and production of ceramic wares. Because China focused on decorative wares, most of their pottery was centered around porcelain instead of earthen wares seem almost everywhere else, and they used the potter's wheel for the development of porcelain clay culture. Porcelain took off during the Ming Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), when the iconic blue and white porcelain ceramics emerged. Several places in China mix traditional elements and methods with modern design and technologies.
Native Americans have been creating ceramics by hand and in more modern eras started incorporating a wheel into their work. Pottery can be identified in the Southwest of North American dating back to 150 CE and has been an important part of Native American culture for over 2,000 years. Historically Native Americans have been using the coiling method to achieve their decorative and functional pieces, and the technology to create an electric wheel did not show up until the arrival of Europeans. However, smaller turntables or slow wheels could have been used occasionally.
The use of the motor-driven wheel has become common in modern times, particularly with craft potters and educational institutions, although human-powered ones are still in use and are preferred by some studio potters.
Industrialization
Social consequences that can arrive of these technological advancements include increased economic advancements in the sales of pottery created using the potter’s wheel and industrialization of the ceramics processes. The potter’s wheel greatly increased the production rate of ceramics, which allowed for more products to be created. With the industrialization of ceramics in Japan, ceramics also lost some of its historical value, and some techniques and meanings of the ceramics were lost in the process.
Techniques of throwing
A skilled potter can quickly throw a vessel from up to 15 kg (30 lb) of clay. Alternatively, by throwing a vessel and adding coils of clay then throwing again, pots may be made even taller, with the heat of a blowlamp being used to firm each thrown section before adding the next coil. Similarly, multiple sections may be thrown and combined to create large vessels. Large wheels and masses of clay can also allow for multiple people to work on a pot simultaneously, which can create very large ceramic pieces. This practice is used in Jingdezhen, China, where 3 or more potters may work on one pot at the same time.
There are a variety of methods to throwing, though almost all involve the following steps in some form: center the clay on the wheel, open a hole in the clay, creating a donut shaped ring of clay around the base of the pot, then raise or shape the walls to create the pots final shape. The specifics of these steps, including the motions of the hands, can vary from culture to culture, as well as from potter to potter. In most cultures, the wheel spins counterclockwise and the right hand is placed on the outside of the pot as it is thrown. Japanese pottery is thrown oppositely, with the wheel spinning clockwise and the right hand on the interior of the pot. However, modern wheels powered by electric motors often allow for rotation in either direction, allowing the potter to choose which direction works best for their technique, hand dominance and personal preferences.
The potter's wheel in myth
In Ancient Egyptian mythology, the deity Khnum was said to have formed the first humans on a potter's wheel.
See also
- Vertical lathe, industrial metal fabrication machine with an operation reminiscent of a potter's wheel
References
- Sophia, Sophia. "Best Pottery Wheel". Best Crafter Studio. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
- Roux, Valentine; Miroschedji, Pierre (2009). "Revisiting the History of the Potter's Wheel in the Southern Levant". Levant. 41 (2): 155–173. doi:10.1179/007589109X12484491671095. S2CID 162097444.
- Kramer, Samuel Noah (1963). The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press. p. 290. ISBN 0-226-45238-7.
- ^ Moorey, Peter Roger Stuart (1999) . Ancient Mesopotamian Materials and Industries: The Archaeological Evidence. Winona Lake, Indiana: Eisenbrauns. p. 146. ISBN 9781575060422.
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External links
- Pottery (video on Internet Archive)
Pottery and claywork | |
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Glossary of pottery terms | |
Base minerals, and glazes | |
Main types, by body | |
Forming techniques | |
Processes and decoration | |
Conservation | |
History of pottery |