Technology comes to face jugs Interesting news article
#3
Posted 05 January 2013 - 09:46 PM
#4
Posted 06 January 2013 - 02:17 AM
Mark
Attached File(s)
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saltjug.jpg (39.88K)
Number of downloads: 29
www.liscomhillpottery.com
#5
Posted 06 January 2013 - 03:32 AM
bciskepottery, on 05 January 2013 - 08:46 PM, said:
To touch a replica not made by touch seems like an oxymoron.Clay is such a tactile media, the fingerprints seem essential.
Marcia
#7
Posted 06 January 2013 - 10:37 AM
Marcia Selsor, on 06 January 2013 - 03:32 AM, said:
bciskepottery, on 05 January 2013 - 08:46 PM, said:
To touch a replica not made by touch seems like an oxymoron.Clay is such a tactile media, the fingerprints seem essential.
Marcia
Yeah . . . I think you're right. Can't replicate the touch of the person who made the original.
#8
Posted 06 January 2013 - 11:18 AM
It is really fascinating what it can do for everybody. Even for the potters.
Do not look at it as a competitor. Molding technique exists for how long? (Do the coffee mugs for $2.99 at Walmart hurt your business? No.)
Look at it as another opportunity to integrate into your work without hurting it.
It is useless to be afraid or fight with the evolution of the human society.
Good example: news paper business and internet.
An artist will never be replaced by a technology. So, adopt, improve, evolve!
P.S. Just bought an app on i-phone for translation of spoken speach. Paid $0.99.
Does it mean the interpreters' job will be gone soon? Of course not. :-)
#9
Posted 06 January 2013 - 11:30 AM
In this building is a computer system running Rinocerous 3-D modeling CAD/CAM software, a CNC machine for making mold making master models, and also the 3-D scanning equipment to make 3-D models directly from scanned objects. This capability was already there way back in 2002.
The potters there utilize every possible forming technique you can think of from slip casting, to pressure slip casting, to hydraulic pressing, to jiggering and jollying, to press molding, to pinching, to slab building, to throwing.
All is finish fired unglazed in noborigama (youhen charcoal technique) or anagama kilns.
The dichotomy that is Japan.
best,
..............john
Immediate Past President; Potters Council
Professor of Ceramics; New Hampshire Insitute of Art
http://www.JohnBaymore.com
#10
Posted 06 January 2013 - 11:50 AM
Jim
"But it does move," said Galileo under his breath.
#11
Posted 06 January 2013 - 11:55 AM
#13
Posted 06 January 2013 - 02:57 PM
Claypple, on 06 January 2013 - 11:18 AM, said:
It is really fascinating what it can do for everybody. Even for the potters.
Do not look at it as a competitor. Molding technique exists for how long? (Do the coffee mugs for $2.99 at Walmart hurt your business? No.)
Look at it as another opportunity to integrate into your work without hurting it.
It is useless to be afraid or fight with the evolution of the human society.
Good example: news paper business and internet.
An artist will never be replaced by a technology. So, adopt, improve, evolve!
P.S. Just bought an app on i-phone for translation of spoken speach. Paid $0.99.
Does it mean the interpreters' job will be gone soon? Of course not. :-)
Good stuff. Post more, Claypple.
Jim
"But it does move," said Galileo under his breath.
#14
Posted 06 January 2013 - 03:25 PM
OffCenter, on 06 January 2013 - 02:57 PM, said:
Claypple, on 06 January 2013 - 11:18 AM, said:
It is really fascinating what it can do for everybody. Even for the potters.
Do not look at it as a competitor. Molding technique exists for how long? (Do the coffee mugs for $2.99 at Walmart hurt your business? No.)
Look at it as another opportunity to integrate into your work without hurting it.
It is useless to be afraid or fight with the evolution of the human society.
Good example: news paper business and internet.
An artist will never be replaced by a technology. So, adopt, improve, evolve!
P.S. Just bought an app on i-phone for translation of spoken speach. Paid $0.99.
Does it mean the interpreters' job will be gone soon? Of course not. :-)
Good stuff. Post more, Claypple.
Jim
http://www.youtube.c...d&v=r0TQKm5ciY0
#15
Posted 06 January 2013 - 05:57 PM
bciskepottery, on 06 January 2013 - 03:25 PM, said:
OffCenter, on 06 January 2013 - 02:57 PM, said:
Claypple, on 06 January 2013 - 11:18 AM, said:
It is really fascinating what it can do for everybody. Even for the potters.
Do not look at it as a competitor. Molding technique exists for how long? (Do the coffee mugs for $2.99 at Walmart hurt your business? No.)
Look at it as another opportunity to integrate into your work without hurting it.
It is useless to be afraid or fight with the evolution of the human society.
Good example: news paper business and internet.
An artist will never be replaced by a technology. So, adopt, improve, evolve!
P.S. Just bought an app on i-phone for translation of spoken speach. Paid $0.99.
Does it mean the interpreters' job will be gone soon? Of course not. :-)
Good stuff. Post more, Claypple.
Jim
http://www.youtube.c...d&v=r0TQKm5ciY0
There is quite a bit of fear out there concerning 3D printing. As in a recent program from CSI New York law enforcement is concerned about the possibility of 3D printed guns. These would have no serial numbers, no markings, and not have to have licenses to own. If you look at the latest in headlines-could be pretty scary.
#16
Posted 10 January 2013 - 08:13 AM
#17
Posted 10 January 2013 - 09:58 AM
Claypple, on 06 January 2013 - 10:18 AM, said:
It is really fascinating what it can do for everybody. Even for the potters.
Do not look at it as a competitor. Molding technique exists for how long? (Do the coffee mugs for $2.99 at Walmart hurt your business? No.)
Look at it as another opportunity to integrate into your work without hurting it.
It is useless to be afraid or fight with the evolution of the human society.
Good example: news paper business and internet.
An artist will never be replaced by a technology. So, adopt, improve, evolve!
P.S. Just bought an app on i-phone for translation of spoken speach. Paid $0.99.
Does it mean the interpreters' job will be gone soon? Of course not. :-)
I know artists creating with 3-d printing. I saw a great demo at the Bray 60th or at an NCECA by John Ballistero. Anna Holcombe is doing very interesting clay creations with 3-d printing. It isn't the technology I find sad, it is the reproduction of a genre of pottery, Face jugs, that depicted the expression of the human spirit created by slaves originally ... and the reproductions callously created without human touch. The technology is awesome and has great potential, but like everything else wisdom, sensitivity don't necessarily follow.
#19
Posted 10 January 2013 - 10:15 AM
Marcia Selsor, on 10 January 2013 - 09:58 AM, said:
Claypple, on 06 January 2013 - 10:18 AM, said:
It is really fascinating what it can do for everybody. Even for the potters.
Do not look at it as a competitor. Molding technique exists for how long? (Do the coffee mugs for $2.99 at Walmart hurt your business? No.)
Look at it as another opportunity to integrate into your work without hurting it.
It is useless to be afraid or fight with the evolution of the human society.
Good example: news paper business and internet.
An artist will never be replaced by a technology. So, adopt, improve, evolve!
P.S. Just bought an app on i-phone for translation of spoken speach. Paid $0.99.
Does it mean the interpreters' job will be gone soon? Of course not. :-)
I know artists creating with 3-d printing. I saw a great demo at the Bray 60th or at an NCECA by John Ballistero. Anna Holcombe is doing very interesting clay creations with 3-d printing. It isn't the technology I find sad, it is the reproduction of a genre of pottery, Face jugs, that depicted the expression of the human spirit created by slaves originally ... and the reproductions callously created without human touch. The technology is awesome and has great potential, but like everything else wisdom, sensitivity don't necessarily follow.
We like to think we can see that wisdom and sensitivity in a piece. I don't know how far the technology has progressed in the past few years, but unless you can see that wisdom and sensitivity in one piece and not the other, then that difference doesn't exist.
Jim
"But it does move," said Galileo under his breath.

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