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2011 March 27

27

Mar
2011

7 Comments

In Artisan Tile

By man-admin

Susan Tunick: The Color of Clay

On 27, Mar 2011 | 7 Comments | In Artisan Tile | By man-admin

Mt. Top Trio:  Violet (side 1) 2008 – 2009  53.5 x 36 x 16.5 inches
(Photography by Russel Hurlburt)

This month, The Tileista (aka JoAnn Locktov) introduces us to ceramic artist Susan Tunick, a woman who makes her own tesserae and uses it to glorious effect in her site-specific sculptures.  No less engaging are her more architectural bricks and tiles.  Enjoy – Nancie

Ceramic artist Susan Tunick has a penchant for scale and surface. All of her creations, site-specific sculptures, mosaic murals and individual bricks and tiles are testaments to architecture. The surfaces are intricately laced, lush in color and texture. Studying architectural ornamentation has given Tunick a heightened awareness of edges, shadows and context-both physical and historical.

Tunick was inspired to work spontaneously on her recent site-specific commission, Mt. Top Trio: Vert, Violet & Rouge. Located on a 600-acre Vermont farm, the land is fertile with wild flowers and grasses, pear, apple and plum orchards. These are three sculptures that provide permanent landscapes of color.

Mt. Top Trio:  Vert  2008 – 2009 53.5 x 36 x 16.5 inches
(Photography by Russel Hurlburt)
Mt. Top Trio:  Violet (side 2)  2008 – 2009  53.5 x 36 x 16.5 inches
(Photography by Russel Hurlburt)

Mt. Top Trio:  Rouge  2008 – 2009  53.5 x 36 x 16.5 inches
(Photography by Russel Hurlburt)

The sides of each organic shaped cedar sculpture are clad in ceramic tile.

Detail of Mt. Top Trio:  Rouge (side 2)
 (Photography by Russel Hurlburt)

Each side of clay bands was created at the same time to insure that they would shrink at the same rate and fit in their respective place. Tunick chose a completely new glazing method that allowed her to “build the colored surface from one firing to the next.” She allowed the color to evolve by glazing non-adjacent elements. By staggering the glazing, she could watch it blossom, a process Tunick compares to “the way a pointillist painting was created.”

Detail of Mt. Top Trio:  Vert
(Photography by Russel Hurlburt)

There is a mesmerizing quality to the sculptures. The trio of forms reverberate color perhaps most vividly when seasons are harsh and nature is devoid of any strong hues.

Mt. Top Trio:  Violet (side 1)  53.5 x 36 x 16.5 inches
(Photography by Russel Hurlburt)

Inspired by haystacks found throughout the countryside, Tunick says, “I didn’t want the shapes to be so symmetrical. Thus, I felt that adding curves and some type of opening in the center could work well. The tile bands reiterate the circular motion of the haystacks – around and around and around!”

Cranberry Double Screen  2008 – 2009 6 x 6 x 6.75 inches
(Photography by Malcolm Varon)

On a smaller scale are Tunick’s perforated tiles and brick units. Both forms explore dimension. The perforated tiles are built with layers revealing surprising glimpses of pattern and depth.  The perforations are witty reminders to both inspect and respect what lies beneath the facade.

Blue Night  2007  12 x 10 x 4 inches
(Photography by Malcom Varon)

Tunick explores the rectangular brick by forming them in wooden molds, stacking and carving them. Constructed of thick hollow backed slabs glazed in radiant colors, the pedestrian brick is elevated to iconic status.

 Klee’s Clay #1  2005  15.25 x 9.5 x 3.5 inches
(Photography by Amiaga Photographers)

Used throughout the world for thousands of years as a humble building material, Tunick has given reverence to the shape by invigorating the surface with color and texture. The bricks vary in depth, creating shadows in their concave spaces and staggered edges. Tunick’s bricks are investigations of architectural masonry in a way that Vitruvius could have never imagined.

Corner Bricks  2005  10 x 9 x 4 inches
(Photography by Amiaga Photographers)

As President of Friends of Terra Cotta, a preservation organization devoted to protecting historic and architectural ceramics, Tunick has studied clay in architecture for over 25 years. She is invested in “seeing ceramics re-integrated into our environment…into landscape, interiors and into the facades of new buildings.”  Her work represents this evolution precisely.

Mount Kisco, NY  2005-2006
A two-part mosaic sculpture; the front was designed to be visible from the road (about 50 feet away) while the back blends into the landscape
(Photography by Peter Maas)

For more information:
www.susantunick.com
Friends of Terra Cotta

“Tileista” is a monthly column that explores the beauty of artisan tile. JoAnn Locktov is the author of two books (Mosaic Art and Style, The Art of Mosaic Design) and numerous articles on contemporary mosaics. Her public relations firm Bella Figura Communications represents individuals and businesses in the visual and literary arts.  Follow her musings on design, tile and Italy on Twitter:

http://twitter.com/jolocktov 
www.bellafiguracommunications.com

To see previous posts by The Tileista on MAN, use the Search widget in the right hand column and type “Tileista”

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