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Manufactured Distractions
& Intersections

2016 - 2020

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections II
Manufactured Distractions - Broken Shard
Homage to Albrecht Dürer
Violent Vicissitude I

WRITTEN BY
Eugene H
ön

Ant Drawing 1
Chameleon Drawing
Beetle Drawing
Fly Drawing 1
Tulip Drawing
Skopo Drawing
Dragon Drawing

MANUFACTURED DISTRACTIONS

& INTERSECTIONS

Various themes and styles intersect throughout the body of work presented in this exhibition and its catalogue. A series of ceramic statements incorporate transfers as simulated fragments, in a way evocative of a world fragmented through multiple simultaneous forms of communication. There is, indeed, not one way of looking at things anymore.

Decorative compositions initiated with my ballpoint drawings were digitally printed to become ceramic transfers and subsequently fired on to ‘ready-mades’ in various shapes and forms. The transfers are applied in varying arrangements, to emulate shattered or restored ceramic vessels. The broken fragments fit together, yet the decoration on each juxtaposed shard contrasts sharply with the next one. This contradiction was achieved by slicing through an underlying, transfer-applied theme or style, making way for another and resulting in a jarring visual effect. In contemplating the vessel, the viewer thus encounters both decorative and rather distracting elements.


The major solo exhibition, Manufactured Distractions and Intersections: Digital Ceramic Transferware, (FADA Gallery, August 2020), comprised of forty whiteware ready-made products onto which I applied printed ceramic transfers made from my ballpoint pen drawings. The drawings were scanned and digitally printed to become transfers and fired onto the ‘ready-mades’. The work was produced over five years as part of an ongoing investigation into to the relationship between drawing and ceramics. My aim was to pioneer creative and innovative ways of applying digitally printed transfers onto ceramic surfaces.


Various traditional decorative themes were investigated, particularly blue-and-white ware (see Series Three, Four and Five), and Kintsugi – the Japanese art of poetic mending (see Series Six and Seven).


The breakthrough came in a series of transferware produced in direct response to the Kintsugi repair techniques and processes, which I applied to restored works and a shattered readymade platter. Here, the Kintsugi techniques of tomotsugi and more precisely yobitsugi – patchwork repair (yobi = patched / tsugi = joining) are realised  in new and re-imagined ways. A dynamic visually simulated approach to this age-old repair tradition is created by connecting related (Tomotsugi) and unrelated fragments (Yobitsugi), intersecting on the surface of the vessel, utilising the manipulated ceramic transfers of my scanned drawings.


The work that followed this breakthrough forms the core of the exhibition. Series One and Two – Manufactured Distractions and Intersections and Vicissitude I, II and III, sees the application of transfers as patchwork, simulated surface fragments, which emulate the style of Kintsugi restoration. For example, in Series One, transfers representing differing (often contrasting and contradictory) themes, styles and subject matter were applied onto the readymades to create complex juxtaposed compositions that read as simulated fragments. The ceramic statements explore the Kintsugi techniques of tomotsugi and particularly yobitsugi simulated patchwork repair, in a way that is evocative of a world fragmented through multiple simultaneous forms of communication. There is, indeed, not one way of looking at things anymore.


In Series Two – I and II, I deal with the theme of ‘beauty in the ugly’, inspired by the narratives captured in the book, Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City, by Matthew Desmond (2016)[1]. In it, he documents the shattered lives of evicted mothers and their children and their struggle to find cohesion in life. The fragmented circumstances of their lives are evoked through transfers depicting dung beetles laying their eggs in dung encircled by flies. As symbols of disintegration and decay, the flies represent landlords, amongst others, who prey on the vulnerable and poor. These images of depravity are juxtaposed with tulips – elusive and ephemeral symbols of beauty and dreams – which wither away amidst the vicissitudes of life.


In Series Two, to quote  Claudia Lehner-Jobst (2020:72)[2], “…plenty of space is left for the luminance of white porcelain to shine through, a stylistic device of the late Baroque”. I borrowed this device to reflect white privilege as it contrasts with the iconography of the destitute. The works make reference to a prayer written on an interior wall of a derelict building, located in the Maboneng Precinct, as told by one of its residents, Siyabonga Dludla. He makes his living as an informal trader selling skopo, sheep’s head, to commuters at a public transit hub. Simulated fragments of applied transfers depicting ants and flies invade the space of the destitute. They represent the landlords and their army of ‘red ants’ –  the teams of men in red overalls who are responsible for the eviction of local residents occupying buildings illegally in Johannesburg.


The work makes a significant contribution to the field of ceramic art in two respects. Firstly, it develops the relationship between traditional Fine Art drawing techniques and ceramics through the introduction of a digital solution to rendering drawings on to ceramic surfaces. Secondly, the ancient Japanese Kintsugi techniques of repair are translated in contemporary innovative, and re-imagined ways, to produce the effect of visually simulated fragments on the surfaces of readymades.

[1] Desmond, Matthew. 2016. Evicted; Poverty and Profit in the American City. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Crown Books.


[2] Tsoumis, Karine (ed). 2020. A Passion for Porcelain. Germany: Arnoldsche.


 

BODY OF WORK

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections - Series One

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections

 

Various themes and styles intersect throughout the body of work presented in this exhibition and its catalogue. A series of ceramic statements incorporate transfers as simulated fragments, in a way evocative of a world fragmented through multiple simultaneous forms of communication. There is, indeed, not one way of looking at things anymore.
 
Decorative compositions initiated with my ballpoint drawings were digitally printed to become ceramic transfers and subsequently fired on to ‘ready-mades’ in various shapes and forms. The transfers are applied in varying arrangements, to emulate shattered or restored ceramic vessels. The broken fragments fit together, yet the decoration on each juxtaposed shard contrasts sharply with the next one. This contradiction was achieved by slicing through an underlying, transfer-applied theme or style, making way for another and resulting in a jarring visual effect. In contemplating the vessel, the viewer thus encounters both decorative and rather distracting elements.

 

Tulip Drawing
Beetle Drawing
Swallow Drawing
Dragon Drawing
Fly Drawing 1
Dungball Drawing

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections - Series Two I

Vicissitude

 

This series of ceramic pieces depicts ‘beauty in the ugly’, inspired by the evocative narratives captured in the book, Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City written by Matthew Desmond (1).  The book documents the shattered lives of mothers and their children who have been evicted from their homes. It presents their ongoing struggle to find cohesion in life; something, which eludes them with every new trial they encounter. The fragmented circumstances of their lives are evoked through images of dung beetles laying their eggs in dung. The dung beetles are encircled by flies. The symbols of disintegration and decay represent landlords, amongst others, who prey on the vulnerable and poor. The images of depravity are juxtaposed with tulips, elusive and ephemeral symbols of beauty and dreams, which nevertheless wither away amidst the vicissitudes of life.

[1] Desmond, Matthew. 2016. Evicted; Poverty and Profit in the American City. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Crown Books.

Tulip Drawing
Beetle Drawing
Dungball Drawing
Fly Drawing 1

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections - Series Two II

Violent Vicissitude

 

In this series, in the words of Claudia Lehner-Jobst (2020:72): “…plenty of space is left for the luminance of white porcelain to shine through - a stylistic device of the late Baroque”.

I have borrowed this device to reflect white privilege as it contrasts sharply with the iconography of the destitute (1).

 

The work makes reference to a prayer written on an interior wall of a derelict building in the Maboneng Precinct, by one of its residents. “My Lord, please help me not to be like a chameleon. To have a single heart that is faithful. Not to have a bad heart that’s filled with anger, so I can be a truthful person before you, Holy Spirit,” (2).

 

[1] Tsoumis, Karine (ed). 2020. A passion for porcelain. Germany: Arnoldsche.

[2] Serina, K. 2015. Gentrification in Johannesburg isn’t good news for everyone.
[O]. Available:
http://america.aljazeera.com/multimedia/2015/3/Gentrification-in-Johannesburg.html
Accessed 17 July 2020. The resident, Siyabonga Dludla makes his living as an informal trader selling skopo, sheep’s head, to commuters at a public transit hub. The room he shares in The Hercules with his girlfriend is very small, even in comparison to the other rooms in the building. He has just enough space for a single mattress and a fridge. The prayer was written on the wall in isiZulu by a previous occupant of the room. 

Skopo Drawing
Ant Drawing 2
Chameleon Drawing
Beetle Drawing
Fly Drawing 1
Dungball Drawing

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections - Series Three

East Meets West

This series of works sees the application of the digitally printed transfers of my blue ballpoint drawings. A variety of subject matter is applied to a single work. With reference to traditional and classical blue and white transferware, I explored creative ways to integrate eastern and western symbols, including graphic elements, synonymous with global interconnectedness. 

Swallow Drawing
Dragon Drawing

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections - Series Four

Activist Platters and Vases

 

For centuries, artists have used the ceramic arts, both decoratively and expressively, to commemorate events and create social or political awareness. In 2008, Judith Swartz published her groundbreaking book, Confrontational Ceramics, in which she documents artists’ approaches, in clay, to such contentious topics. In the demanding here and now of our interconnected global world, social media demands our awareness of social issues: xenophobia, migration and the refugee crisis, including the Hong Kong Umbrella Revolution.

Swallow Drawing
Dragon Drawing

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections - Series Five

Just a Beautiful Game

 

This series is a response to the enormous investments China is currently making locally in the development of football and its anticipated long-term effect on the country’s cultural industries, notably ceramics. In China, before starting their formal schooling, young girls and boys of just four and five  years of age are taken to museums and local ceramic centres of excellence, as part of a much-anticipated initiation into the world of clay. This foray lies at the very heart of the nation’s cultural development programme and its economy. China’s current president, an ardent supporter of ‘the beautiful game’ himself, hopes the country will in the not too distant future host the football World Cup and perhaps win it! In this series a five-clawed dragon, as the national cultural symbol of China, is playfully shown engaging in a game of choice between the traditional flaming pearl and a football, here presented as a Western symbol. 

 

China seems to be cultivating a culture of sport rather than craft, at present.  I am lamenting the coming of Western cultural ideas to China and the danger of its indigenous heritage being neglected or ultimately suppressed.

Flaming Pearl Drawing
Swallow Drawing
Water Pattern from Drawing
Dragon Drawing

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections - Series Six

Refuse

 

This series derives its title from the migration of the Barn Swallow, here representing the droves of migrants and refugees who flee their homes each year in search of a better life. The swallow is a Palearctic-breeding, summer migrant with a wide distribution range. Its travel zone spans Europe, America, Asia and South Africa, and especially Mount Moreland in KwaZulu Natal, which is the roosting ground of about five million swallows each year.

 

Global migration amongst people occurs for a variety of reasons. These may be economic, social, political or environmental. Refugees make up about 10% of the international migration figure of 272 million. This series references ceramic shards as a poignant symbol of the cultural migrations even more prevalent in today’s global society with its displaced persons. The ceramic ‘ready-mades’ are either broken or restored; utilised as repurposed vessels instead of rejects. Hence the title Refuse, which reinforces the inherent subject matter of the series.

Barn Swallow with Crack

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections - Series Seven

Homage to Albrecht Dürer

 

This series of ceramics is an homage to Albrecht Dürer, not only a painter, printmaker and engraver but also a mathematician and theorist. The drawing is an interpretation of Dürer's Iris Troiana (1508). It is rendered in blue, red and pink ballpoint pen ink, depicting a bruised flower. The iris references the 1970's feminist movement.

Iris Drawing

Manufactured Distractions & Intersections - Drawing and Ceramics

Pioneering a Digital Solution

 

Laser printed ceramic transfers of  my ballpoint pen drawings, produced in a wide range of colours and sizes, digitally enhanced and applied to ceramics, create new opportunities. The transfer captured drawing marks like brush strokes, present a wide range of decorative and expressive options, with far greater image clarity and detail,, hereto unobtainable with a brush. Through my drawing and design, and by referencing ceramic craft tradition, I was able to create a new and tangible interpretation of this artform.

Barn Swallow Drawing

EXHIBITION

Manufactured Distractions - Exhibition Title

EXHIBITED AT

FADA Gallery
University of Johannesburg
October 2022

DRAWINGS

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