Friday, February 05, 2010

Another clay session

Jill and I got together to work the clay some more and pay closer attention to the structural aspects of our creation. This time around, we concentrated on plants.

From 2010 World Ice Championships preparation: Sonoran Sunset


Prickly Pears: ~ 3+' tall (to ~ 5'?)
We decided that trying to attach individual pads would be infeasible for a bunch of reasons: The pads themselves are heavy, gluing the ice can be a finnicky process. Picture a bunch of misshapen dominoes crashing to the ground. Instead, we're opting to create a base (think "lips"), which will have several pads etched into it, with a few pads rising up out of it. Additional pads would be created in 2's, 3's, 4's, whatever, and attached to the base. The extra advantage here is that there will be more surface area available for attachment, and also multiple surfaces. This produces a stronger bond.



Cholla: ~4-5' tall
The cholla presents some challenges, too. In reality, the plant is a series of connected nodules (picture ovoid tubes) covered from one end to the other in nasty terrible spines. The real plant would (again) be a nightmare to try to recreate, with a noticable lack of support for the tubes. In our version, the plant would be supported by a stable pedistal topped by a multi-armed star and additional vertical support. Tubes will be cut with bob-the-boiler in long shapes, and then will be "segmented" by etching with powertools. Textures will also be added by drilling lots and lots of tiny holes into them.then, they'll be assembled like one of those geodesic hemispherical playground climbing bars.. Hopefully.



Barrel Cactus: ~3'tall
~2' diameter cylendar, tilted somewhat, deeply etched with many crenelations. I've played around with the idea of spines, but am still unconvinced if I'll even bother. We'll try to do flowers on top, and see where that leads.






Saguaro #1: 20' tall, arms start at 6'
In the photo, toothpicks represent places where block seams will go. A person, then will be as high as the skinny green toothpick. The saguaro has been made skinnier, giving it a more svelte outline, and taller feel. The arms will go to 10' to 12'. yipes. I'm both excited and apprehensive about this piece. Once fully erected, we're not going to want to be anywhere under it.

1 comment:

Tom said...

You should make spines out of icicles and attach them to the cholla