|
| Candice
Wakumotos She Shells, of silver clay, 22K and 18K gold,
pink tourmaline, Hawaiian coconut fiber, sterling silver. Photo:
Larry Sanders. |
Instant gratification.
Thats how artists almost universally describe the appeal of
metal clay.
The metal clays have an extraordinary immediacy to them which
allows one to develop methods and sketch with them in
a way that has not been truly possible in metal before, says
Greenacres, Washington, artist Kurt Madison.
That instant gratification is the source of both metal clays
growing popularity, and its struggle to be taken seriously as a
jewelry material. When metal clay was first introduced in the United
States, its hands-on immediacy led to a flood of textured silver
pieces, many rather primitive. Jewelers and hobbyists alike were
enchanted by the ability to simply press the clay onto a surface
to transfer a texture. But that accessibility to those with no jewelry
skills or artistic training left some in the industry
deriding it as little more than Play-Doh for jewelers.
The traditional metal world is somewhat rigid. A lot of metalsmiths
go through a fairly lengthy training process to become a jeweler,
and it requires a wide variety of skills that take a long time to
develop . . . and then metal clay comes along and I can teach someone
to make jewelry in one day, says Carl Stanley, a metal clay
artist in Santa Barbara, California. Its just sort of
a slap in the face of traditional techniques. [Trained jewelers
responded by saying] Anyone can do this, so why should I get
involved? Theres no artistry involved.
| What Is Metal Clay? |
| Metal clay
isnt a true clay: its a manmade substance
that the manufacturers called clay for its working
properties, not its relationship to pottery. As Tim McCreight,
author of The Complete Metalsmith and a consultant for Mitsubishi,
notes, a more accurate name might be Precious Metal Pliable
Moldable Substance, but thats a mouthful! Metal clay
consists of extremely fine, precious metal powder, suspended
in an organic binder. When heated to a high temperature, the
binder burns off and the metal powder fuses together, leaving
behind a solid piece of pure silver or gold.
There are two brands of metal clay currently
available in the United States: Precious Metal Clay (PMC®)
produced by Mitsubishi Materials Corp., and Art Clay®,
sold by Aida Chemical Industries, both headquartered in Japan.
Both brands work in basically the same way, although small
differences in the binder formulas produce slightly different
working characteristics. These differences lead some artists
to prefer one brand or another, but which brand you choose
is largely a matter of personal preference. The first metal
clay marketed in the United States was Mitsubishis original
Precious Metal Clay, followed shortly afterward by Art Clay®.
Both companies have since introduced several versions of their
product to meet different needs. SW |
But for Stanley and other artists, it isnt the medium but
what you do with it that counts. And a decade after metal clays
introduction into the United States, the material is beginning to
show its true potential. I think initially there was a lot
of resistance, and it wasnt respected as a medium, says
Shahasp Valentine, a San Francisco jewelry artist who works almost
exclusively in metal clay. No one was making anything that
really looked like [traditional] jewelry in the beginning. But I
think now, as people are doing more with it and the work becomes
more sophisticated and more interesting, I think its gaining
a lot more respect from the jewelry community at large.
Metal clay artists generally share a love of texture, since one
of metal clays great advantages is its ability to be textured
in an almost infinite number of ways. They also tend to possess
a fondness for the way they can manipulate the material with their
bare hands. Although virtually every artist is initially attracted
by metal clays pliability and immediacy, many have taken it
beyond its clay roots. Their work ranges from the organic to the
architectural, from rough-hewn to sculptural. Some artists work
exclusively in metal clay, while others use traditional metalworking
techniques alongside the metal clay, and combine it with a variety
of other art mediums, from dichroic glass to polymer clay.
These seven artists are only a few of the many creating truly unique,
beautiful jewelry in metal clay. But their work is an excellent
place to see the mediums potential.
| Shahasp Valentine:
|
Evolving Organics |
|
| Two
of the Four Petals necklaces from Shahasp Valentine's Precieux
series (above), in which she sets white sapphires either in
silver (left) or 24K gold (right) bezels. Photo: Shahasp Valentine. |
My work really has evolved quite a bit since I started with
PMC, says Valentine. Ive had some of these ideas
in my head since junior high school, but to try and execute them
traditionally is a really big deal. Like my lily pendants
to do that traditionally would require a ton of work in wax, and
then casting, or hammering or texturing endlessly. I find PMC is
so gratifying because its so tactile. I can execute these
textural ideas and concepts in my head in a way I cant get
from any other jewelry technique.
Valentines work is currently split into two distinct collections:
the Precieux series, which uses historical motifs, and the
Organic series, inspired by nature. Both take advantage of
different features of metal clay.
For her Precieux series, Valentine scans designs, such as
a fleur de lis, into her computer, and uses an illustration program
to produce perfectly symmetrical patterns. The pattern is printed
and traced onto soft polymer clay, which is then partially baked
and carved to form a mold for the metal clay. Although she may create
up to 50 pieces from each mold, each is individually decorated and
shaped for a one-of-a-kind look.
|
|
Shahasp Valentine's Knife Edge necklaces, made of 24K
gold PMC with pearl. Photo: Shahasp Valentine. |
For the Organics series, Valentine works directly in metal
clay, shaping pieces inspired by the ocean. A number of years
ago I went on a trip with my boyfriend to South Africa, Valentine
recalls. I was sitting on a beach and looking at these amazing
tidepools filled with little creatures and it just hit me. I came
home with all these sketches and photos. My Habitat rings
and necklaces are my interpretation of the tidepools.
Valentines Knife Edge series came out of this type
of hands-on shaping in the days after September 11, as the pendants
she was working on inexorably took on a sharper, harder edge. Right
after 9/11, I just wasnt feeling very fluffy and happy. The
Wave pendants are very undulating and textural, and I was feeling,
life is harsh, and the Knife Edge design just
kind of happened, Valentine recalls. I started making
the pendants really straight with a super fine edge, a knife edge,
representing how harsh life can be and that the world can be a really
harsh place.
PMC just allows me to so easily create whatever has popped
into my head, concludes Valentine. It also keeps me
interested in what I do. I dont want to make 100 of the same
necklace. With PMC I do multiples, but every single one is different.
Its always changing, everythings always fresh and new.
With traditional lost-wax casting, once you get it cast, thats
all youve got, and thats not interesting to me. PMC
has given me the freedom to really create in a more one-of-a-kind
way.
| Carl Stanley:
|
Experimental
Artist |
|
|
Carl Stanleys Kit #1, of PMC silver, 18K gold, enamel,
sterling silver, and plastic. Photo: Patrick Flannery. |
Carl Stanleys artistic journey in metal clay has been one
long experiment. Even his discovery of the material was through
a test. Every time Id look through the Rio Grande catalog,
Id be intrigued (metal clay, whats up with this?), so
one day I just ordered some, he remembers. I already
had kilns because I do casting, and I had a lot of metal experience,
so I just went ahead and made a couple of things a little
vessel, some funky sculptural items and fired them. And I
just sort of fell for it right away.
What I like best about PMC is that it really opens a new
creative door in my mind, Stanley says. It makes me
want to experiment all the time. And experiment he has. He
has developed techniques for torch-firing gold metal clay slip (metal
clay mixed with water to form a paste) onto silver clay, and is
testing methods of combining metal clay and glass into mosaics.
When metal clay paper was introduced, he immediately started playing
with combinations of metal clay and fine silver wire to create lightweight
earrings.
|
|
Carl Stanleys Long Face Spirit from his Shaman Bead series,
of silver PMC and enamel. Photo: Brian Meek. |
As a senior instructor with the Rio Rewards PMC program administered
by the PMC Guild, Stanley also finds his students a source of inspiration.
When you work with students, your students work influences
you as well, especially people with no experience whatsoever with
metal or metalsmithing, he says. They have no expectations,
so theyre the ones that break the rules. I once heard Charles
Lewton Brain say that if you make a mistake three times and it works,
then youve discovered a new technique. I just love that.
Between experiments, Stanley returns to his more sculptural work,
especially bead designs featuring faces. When I was in school
I took a lot of anthropology courses because Ive always liked
ancient cultures, [and those] cultures seemed to sculpt images of
themselves and their desires in facial form, he says. My
shaman beads are like expressions of unknown ancient cultures. They
look like they were buried, dug up, and need to be interpreted.
The faces have a humorous side, as well When I start doing
a design, the first thing I do to get warmed up a little is draw
little cartoon faces, Stanley says. Probably because
theyre so familiar and because I like to make funny expressions,
with twisted faces and big long noses.
Stanley says metal clay is the ideal material for producing those
expressions in silver. Its so sculptural. I know its
going to end up as metal, but when youre in the clay state
working with it, it doesnt feel that way. The mind doesnt
associate with metal at this point, he says. Its
so different from carving wax, where youre digging and chipping.
With metal clay, youre sculpting with clay, smearing and smoothing.
Its so much more sculptural.
Carl
Stanley shows you how to make Bell
Earrings using metal clay in
Step by Step.
| Wendy Wallin
Malinow: |
Color Reigns |
Color is king for Wendy Wallin Malinow. Im extremely
nonsubtle, she laughs. My illustrations and drawings
from day one have been with very bright water colors. People ask
my color theory, and I tell them I have these toy paints Ive
had since the 60s, and I use them right out of the pan. Thats
my color theory I like bright colors.
Malinows polymer and metal clay pieces reflect that love
of bright color. Her current work features polymer clay inlaid into
a fired metal clay piece, producing jewelry that is often mistaken
for cloisonné enamel. Ive always been kind of
a mixed media person anyway, she explains. I started
combining metal clay and polymer because I wanted color with the
metal clay, and in reverse, I wanted a more precious feel with the
polymer. To me, the contrasts are really great.
Although she has also experimented with enamel in metal clay, polymer
clay is her preferred medium. With polymer, if you smear it
into the piece and it doesnt work, you just take it back out.
Its also flexible on the surface, so if you bang the jewelry
around it stays in pretty well. I can have it matte, or shiny, or
add glitter. Its just got that plastic quality that you can
do a lot of things with.
|
|
|
Wendy Wallin Malinow combines metal clay with other materials
to reflect her love of bright color. At left is Neck Jest, made
of metal and polymer clay; to the right is Sea Heart, of PMC+,
polymer clay, resin, and sterling silver. Photos: Courtney Frisse. |
Malinow worked in polymer clay for years before she added metal
clay to her repertoire. I remember hearing about it through
the grapevine, she says. I read about it, and I thought,
That sounds great. When an opportunity came to
take a workshop in the material, she jumped at the chance. Ive
been hooked ever since.
While polymer fulfills her desire for color, metal clay meets a
need for substance. Three-dimensional [polymer-only] pieces
dont hold up well on their own. [Now I use] a shell of silver
that protects the delicate pieces from wear, she says. And
with the metal clay it just feels like Ive added more preciousness
to it. One of the frustrations I had working with polymer is that
I didnt like the feel and the weight of it. The metal clay
has added that [to my work.]
| Gordon Uyehara:
|
An Artist is
Born |
|
|
| The
House of Infinite Wisdom Necklace is of kiln-fired silver
clay with a lab-created padparadscha sapphire and an amber lab-created
sapphire cabochon (on reverse). The pendant hangs from a woven
sterling necklace with fine silver endcaps and sterling beads
and toggle clasp. 45.9 mm x 47 mm x 8.8 mm. Image by Gordon
Uyehara. |
Until he discovered metal clay, Gordon Uyehara of Honolulu, Hawaii,
was a computer scientist. Then a blurb in a local newspaper led
him to a metal clay class at a bead shop, and an artist was born.
I think Ive always been an artist, but I guess I got
to believing that you cant make a living off art, he
says. Then they had a reorganization at work, and it wasnt
working for me, and I did two things: I started reading how
to live the life you love-type books, and I started meditating.
And one morning I woke up at 2 a.m. and said, Im free.
So I resigned and said I was going to be an artist.
Now pursuing his passion full time, Uyehara builds carefully crafted
pieces. He normally works from sketches, shaping the clay in its
wet form, then refining it further after it dries. I like
to focus first on shape, and then on texture. And then I just generally
like to do something that hasnt been seen before, he
says.
His pieces can take as much as a week to complete. My pieces
are fairly complicated, so Ill work on it a little, put it
down, do something else and come back, he explains. I
think the fact that [metal clay is] easily shaped and carved makes
it easy for me to work with. The other aspect that I really make
use of is that its easy to join separate pieces, so I can
work on different shapes individually, refine them, and then paste
them together.
Although he is currently learning traditional metalsmithing techniques,
he says metal clay still holds an almost mystical fascination for
him. I think its the metamorphosis of having something
that you can shape, and then its easy to get it to silver,
he says. I still find it fascinating.
| Kurt Madison:
|
The Artist
Discovers Art Clay |
|
|
| Kurt
Madisons Blue Wrap pin, made of Art Clay silver sheet
with a dichroic glass insert fused in; 1/2" x 1-1/2"
x 1/3". Photo: Matt Winghart. |
For artist Kurt Madison, metal clay is just the newest in a series
of media hes worked with in the last 30 years. I do
a lot of different things, he says. Right now Im
working on a three-ton full-scale carving in brick in the form of
a coiled firehose for a public works project. So one day its
glass and [metal] clay, and the next day its a seven-foot
sculpture or ten stained glass panels for St. Francis of Assisi
Church. But all that is feeding the art, and [metal clay] is a part
of that.
Jewelry has been part of Madisons artistic endeavors since
he studied metalsmithing during his undergraduate studies in art
and sculpture. But the addition of metal clay to his repertoire
has helped jewelry become a more prominent part of his portfolio.
Metal clay has moved me from a long period of casual designing
to a much faster-developing phase, which is wonderful, he
says.
|
|
| V-Pendant,
by Kurt Madison, of Art Clay silver built over a cork clay form
with fine silver flakes fired into the surface and a sterling
silver chain; 3" x 1-1/2" x 1/2". Photo: On the
Edge Images. |
Madison recalls being intrigued by metal clay the first time he
saw it in the Rio Grande catalog, but it was several years before
he actually tried the material. [My wife and I] saw it right
after it came out, but it took eight or nine years for us to acquire
some, he remembers. I took a Saturday workshop, and
that was enough for me. I took the workshop in late July, and by
August 10 I had a kiln. I dont have a lot of money to stock
a studio just because Im interested in a material, but it
was clear that this was a dynamite material.
With metal clay in his tool box, Madison began making jewelry from
sketches hed been doing for years. When I was sitting
in meetings in whatever job [I had], Id be doodling on my
pad and Id look and say, thats a pin, thats a
bracelet . . . The metal clay has allowed me to start going from
little nurdles and doodles to actually fabricating stuff.
Although he finds that some in the art community dont take
metal clay seriously, hes confident that as more talented
metalsmiths and artists begin working in the medium, metal clay
will become a respectable material for artistic endeavor. There
are people more traditional than I am who would say I should use
my traditional skills, that I shouldnt use that metal clay
goo, he says. I think theyre wrong. I think 10
years from now, were going to see a revolution in the jewelry
trade because of these materials. The jewelers trade isnt
going to look the same at all.
| Candice Wakumoto:
|
Drawing on
Tradition |
|
|
| Candice
Wakumotos Ipulani, made of silver clay, 22K and 18K gold,
blue topaz, amethyst, Hawaiian coconut fiber, and sterling silver.
Photo: Larry Sanders. |
Candice Wakumotos background is as a graphic designer, so
it probably isnt surprising that her jewelry pieces all start
with a sketch. I have to draw everything exactly how I want
it, and then when I fabricate I have to exactly follow it. Everything
is planned, says the Mililani, Hawaii-based jewelry artist.
Sometimes when people see my sketches, they think I drew it
after [I made the piece].
Even the immediacy of metal clay hasnt changed that work
habit. I dont like wasting time working with stuff,
she explains. If you plan it ahead of time, you can always
add to where youre going, but I like to know the basics of
it. Its easier to get started.
While Wakumoto may be an advance planner, she enjoys the inspiration
offered by metal clay. I just like that whatever you want
to do, you can do with it, she says. You just have an
endless amount of textures you can deal with. And shapes
its just a matter of working out the technicalities. I work
with a lot of hollow forms, and its ideal for hollow pieces.
Wakumoto also enjoys combining metal clay with other fabrication
techniques. I like the idea of marrying the two together,
she says. I can do silver clay and add fabrication, and make
something one-of-a-kind and unique.
Gemstones are also set using traditional methods. You can
fire gemstones in the clay, but Im not satisfied with what
it looks like, because its just pushing gemstones into the
material, she says. I like having gemstones bezel set,
and I like big stones and mixing stones, and to me, that means you
have to fabricate settings.
A two-time Saul Bell Award winner, Wakumoto is largely self-taught
in metal clay. When she began working with the material shortly
after it was introduced, the information just wasnt
out there, and I felt that working with it was the only way to go,
she says. And I found I had to do it myself, because Im
trying to do different things, like marrying it with fabrication.
So I just try it and see if it works. And if it doesnt, well,
sometimes perseverance pays off.
| CeCe Wire:
|
Architectural
Inspiration |
|
|
| CeCe
Wires Bird House Bead II, made of PMC+, PMC+ paper, and
sterling silver cable. Photo: Kyle Castle. |
If CeCe Wires current work brings to mind nostalgic memories
of rural America, well, its supposed to.
Two days a week, I drive through farmland [on the way to
work], and I sort of get nostalgic about growing up on a farm,
says Wire. I know the reality is that its a lot of hard
work, but my memories are those of a five-year-old, of hunting for
kittens every day, of geese and ducks and Jack the Mule, and of
flowers in the springtime.
Wire has turned those romantic memories into a series of rings
featuring barns and silos. The images close to me now are
silos and barns with interesting cupolas: as a shape, they intrigue
me, she says. Theyre architectural, but for me
they also evoke these memories.
Although Wire could have used traditional fabrication techniques
to construct her barns, she finds metal clay frees her creative
impulse. With [metal clay] I can construct in the same way
as with flat sheet, but the seams are held together with slip, which
allows for seams that are not as perfect. Its much faster
and easier to construct that way, she says. [It also]
gives more warmth to the piece: you can see the makers hand
in it. When you solder-construct sheet metal, it has a certain coolness
and crispness thats actually less attractive. It can push
people away because its so crisp and tight and fussy. Theres
something about working with PMC that has more warmth and softness.
|
|
| Asian
Assemblage, by CeCe Wire, of PMC+, woven PMC+ paper, sterling
silver, sterling silver tubing, brass tubing, brass nuts and
bolts, Nepalese chain, antique Chinese coin, carved horn, and
ostrich eggshell. Wire calls this piece a fusion of traditional
metal working techniques with PMC. |
Wire builds barns and boxes by rolling out slabs of metal clay,
allowing them to dry, and then assembling the piece from the dried,
unfired components. I work with [metal clay] more in the dry
stage because its what Im used to as a metalsmith,
she says. So, for example, in assembling those barn structures
I roll out slabs, sometimes I texture them, let them dry, and then
I have walls and I can build just by gluing things together
[with metal clay slip.]
Like most metal clay artists, Wire is fascinated by the variety
of textures metal clay can take on. With [metal clay] you
can get a very deep, juicy texture thats really not possible
with a steel tool or hammer. The rolling mill is a very different
type of texture, and its shallow by comparison, she
says.
That deep texture would also pose serious problems in traditional
construction. Texture gets in your way when youre soldering,
Wire explains. But with [metal clay] you can get an intricate
texture, and then use slip [to join pieces] so it doesnt become
a hindrance in assembling.
From her perch as director of the PMC Guild, Wire says she sees
more and more sophisticated work being created, and is excited by
the materials potential. I feel as if were just
playing around at the tip of the iceberg, she says. Were
introducing glass and natural stones, using the gold as slip to
encase things in gold, combining [metal clay] with porcelain and
other ceramics all of these have a lot of possibilities.
I think theres a whole world out there that has yet to be
explored, and that really excites me.
Suzanne Wade has written about the gem and
jewelry industry for more than 10 years. Formerly editor/associate
publisher of AJM magazine, she is now a part-time freelance writer,
editor of the PMC Guilds newsletter Studio PMC, and a full-time
Mom.
| To contact the artists
in this article: |
| Kurt
Madison, P.O. Box 833, Greenacres, WA, 99016, punctumdesign@yahoo.com
Wendy Wallin Malinow, (503) 697-3877 (phone/fax),
10815 SW Southridge, Portland, OR 97219
Carl Stanley, (805) 687-5415, cstan@earthlink.net
Gordon Uyehara, P.O. Box 1373, Aiea, HI 96701, gordon@honudream.com,
www.honudream.com
Shahasp Valentine, (415) 920-9439, P.O. Box 460624,
San Francisco, CA 94146, www.precieux.com.
Candice Wakumoto, PO Box 893113, Mililani, HI 96789,
CandiceWakumoto@msn.com
CeCe Wire, (970) 419-5503, cece@PMCguild.com,
www.PMCguild.com. |
|