Ceramics: Art and Perception

Repair and reuse: then and now

The attitudes that ancient peoples held about broken pottery, so different from perspectives in our consumerist age, are important to consider at a time when the effects of excessive energy consumption threaten the future of humanity. Today, the demand for perfection in ceramic products results in the disposal of millions of only slightly damaged wares annually. It is too easy and inexpensive to replace chipped cups or cracked plates with flawless new pieces. Large quantities of wares with minor firing imperfections never reach the market in the first place, but instead are culled at the factory, crushed, and buried in landfills. In contrast, ancient peoples in general not only tolerated irregularities such as firing clouds, warpage, and kiln debris, but they also frequently repaired broken vessels and returned them to service or altered them for reuse as other kinds of tools. The differences between ancient and modern practices are perhaps nowhere more profound than in North America, the birthplace of modern mass-consumerism and the commercial strategy of planned obsolescence.

Repair of pots in ancient North America, whether the damage consisted of hairline cracks or breakage of a

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Ceramics: Art and Perception

Ceramics: Art and Perception3 min read
Q&A: Coasting Cones
Q: After I turn off the kiln why are the positions of my pyrometric cones different when I unload the kiln? The pyrometric cones are designed to show heat work (energy input during firing, normally represented in terms of temperature and time) that h
Ceramics: Art and Perception4 min read
Clay Houses
When looking at an unfamiliar work of art in a museum, one often seeks out the label first. I encourage foregoing the label for a few moments. Just study the work. Sketching the work is the best method I’ve found to force myself into close observatio
Ceramics: Art and Perception6 min read
My Grandfather’s Marbles
My grandfather John Wilbur Carr grew up in Jefferson County, Pennsylvania in the town of Punxsutawney. His ancestors settled in Western Pennsylvania after the Wyoming Valley Massacre of 1778 forced them from the farm they had, near the present-day Na

Related Books & Audiobooks