Sunday 10 March 2013

Essays, dissertations, theses etc. etc...

One of my friends from the RCA is now working at the National Glass Centre in Sunderland and asked me for a .pdf version of my RCA thesis for their library. When I have finished converting it to .pdf, I’ll also send it to the RCA library where it will be available to students.

And yesterday, I received an email from a student at the Sotheby’s Institute who asked a number of incisive questions about my practice. From time to time students have asked to use my work in their essays and dissertations, so I thought it might be useful to reproduce the questions and my replies.

You mentioned in your blog that a new Arts and Craft movement may be necessary and that technology does not warrant good design and that a material led process is still essential. What do you think is the appropriate way to combine traditional craft with high technology in this age?

In Britain, at the present time there is a lack of joined up thinking by our political leaders. The Chancellor, George Osborne stood up at the dispatch box in the House of Commons to say that Britain's economic recovery will happen through the hands of makers, in other words there is a need to apply our creativity to manufacturing innovative products in the UK. Last week the Culture Minister, Ed Vaizey was on Radio 4 championing British 'world leading creativity'. However, down the road in the Ministry of Education, Michael Gove was set to remove the Creative subjects from the curriculum through the introduction of the English baccalaureate. Though the proposal has been dropped, there is still a threat to the rating of schools through the use of EBacc criteria where the creative subjects are not taken into consideration. Where does he expect the next generations of creative thinkers to come from? 
Hopefully, you will be able to see where my tirade is heading. There is a real need to recognize the place of making at all stages of the education system. It must go hand in hand with the use of technology, in fact there is a need to be far more creative with technology, so that coding should also taught in schools. 

My generation spans the digital divide, I grew up before computers and spent a lot of time making and building stuff, it was what we did. So computers are something that I have seen as 'other' whereas generations growing up with computers and digital technology don't have the same potential hang-ups. The way forward is not to differentiate between digital and non-digital tools. They can be used singly, separately and in harmony. It's all about choosing the right tool for the job. But in order to make the correct choice the maker has to have experience of both sets of tools.

The definition of the word 'craft' has evolved over the years. The Arts and Crafts movement had a particular definition, relating to the inhumanity of the Industrial Revolution. It may have been the blinkered view of a privileged class, but it was very influential, encouraging generations of makers to head off to the countryside to grow vegetables and make heavy brown pots! Urban makers reacted against this in the 1970's and craft to a large degree became a dirty word, especially as conceptual ideas seemed to be the only thing that counted in the Art world.

I think that the definition of craft is changing again, with academics such as Malcolm McCullough, Richard Sennett, Glenn Adamson and Christopher Frayling helping to re-define the word. And the boundaries between the disciplines are becoming blurred, personally I define myself as maker, someone happy to inhabit and explore the grey area between art, craft, design and technology. 

To quote Alex Coles, “…Eden’s work is persuasive evidence of how one of the most convincing ways to extend craft today in order to integrate it more closely with art and design is precisely by using cutting-edge technology to trigger a process of conceptual and formal investigation. By aiding experimentation in this way, technology is utilized as a means to an end rather than simply being an end in itself.”[i]


Could you expand on why and how you incorporate the virtual experiences? The QR code is a great example of this. Does this reflect that decorative objects will need to serve additional functions, to entertain its audience, to remain relevant? 

A beautifully crafted teapot does not require an additional contrived virtual dimension to complete the users experience of brewing tea in it or appreciating it, sat on a shelf in the kitchen. The owner of such an object develops a relationship to it through use, through sharing a cup of tea with friends. Its physicality is enhanced by those sensory and emotional experiences, it needs nothing more.
However, as information becomes increasingly available through data it is now possible to not only realize information as objects but to interact with them in new ways. Both the Mnemosyne and the Babel vessel have been acquired by museums (Carnegie Art Museum, Pittsburgh and Aberdeen Art Gallery respectively). I plan to work with their web designers to allow the viewer/user to interact with them in meaningful ways, creating links to other objects in the museum and allowing new stories to be told. I see them. 
I don't think these pieces are superior to non-interactive pieces, they simply offer another type of experience.

What motivates and inspires you? 
You have included cultural and historical references, as seen in the Wedgewood Tureen, what is their significance in your works?

I hang a story on culturally significant objects as a way of commenting on making, encouraging a debate around craft and to tell a multi-layered story. But they are also chosen to seduce the viewer by their familiarity. I want the viewer to engage, to be surprised, to have their perceptions challenged.

To whom are you designing for? What type of home do you see your pieces in?

Primarily for me, it's self-indulgence. But I hope that this approach will connect the objects to an audience. I hope that I make artworks with integrity and passion and that the viewer recognises the energy and effort that goes into them.

What are your findings in working with a synthetic material? Do you miss the tactile nature and the warmth of clay?

My eventual aim is to 3D print clay. I have collaborated with others to produce a few 3D printed ceramic pieces, some of which I have successfully fired using the same lead glazes that we used on our slipware. The aim is to bring together the almost pre-industrial craft skills and materials that I previously used with post-industrial manufacturing, thereby creating a new ceramic language. Meanwhile, it is important for me to explore and fully exploit the technology and materials available to me. Nylon is not clay, never will be, but I can hopefully still use those materials to make meaningful objects. And they are a challenge to experiment with, so i have been copper plating and exploring silver plating amongst other trials.

Babel Vessel I:
I have read that the Chinese 'hu' vessel was an inspiration to you. Can you expand on your choice of this form and culture?
Unicorns adorn the side of the vessel, what do they symbolize?

On a visit to the British Museum I noticed the surface decoration of a 6th century BCE Chinese ceremonial wine vessel, known as a hu, as it reminded me of the QR barcodes.
When translated, the Chinese symbols tell of battles won or of heroic deeds by emperors. Like the QR code, I wasn’t able to read them without a translator (or an App). So the viewer can scan the Babel Vessel with their Smart phone, which then connects to a video on my website telling the story, providing additional information thereby creating a simultaneous actual and virtual experience.

The lion and the unicorn handles replace the traditional Chinese serpents and make a cryptic reference to the uncomfortable relationship that has existed between Britain and China at various times in our histories. They also (positively) refer to the Royal College of Art (taken from the Royal Standard logo of the RCA), without which I wouldn't have been able to make these things.



[i] Coles, Alex. ‘Michael Eden, The Practitioner, Artist, Designer.’ SOFA 2011 catalogue essay.
Alex Coles is the author of DesignArt (Tate Publishing, 2005), co-author of Project VITRA (Birkhauser, 2008), and the editor of Design and Art (MIT/Whitechapel). He also writes regularly for the Financial Times and The Art Newspaper. 

MIRIAD activities...


 w/e 25.01.13 – The Prtlnd Vase

The Research Fellowship at MIRIAD moves on, with a certain amount of juggling, which I guess is very much the normal state of affairs when practice and research overlap so seamlessly.

My version of the Portland Vase, made a couple of months ago by SLS has given me much to think about, particularly around the relationship between traditional and digital making. The piece is a response to the way we increasingly experience the real world through a screen. Regardless of the clarity of our devices, it is still a 2 dimensional image that we are engaging with. Even Augmented Reality doesn’t hold a candle to the real thing. And though the Google Art Project sets the taste buds tingling, and may save you queuing in line to visit the Uffizi, can it be compared to the real thing. I’m sure Google would say that it’s not designed to replace, but to enhance the real thing, and that’s fair enough, but we are increasingly replacing the actual with the virtual visual experience.
My concern, as I’m sure you are aware if you have read any of my other ramblings, is that for a true understanding of the material world you need to get dirty and uncomfortable sometimes.

But back to the Portland Vase. It was chosen because it is a much revered, iconic object that has been copied in the past, most famously by Josiah Wedgwood, who borrowed the original Roman glass vase from the Duke of Portland in the late 18th century and after many trials successfully created a version in his famous jasper ware.
My Prtlnd Vase is another interpretation of the original, but in my case I didn’t borrow the original from the British Museum. I based my designs on images gleaned from search engines. There were lots of identical images taken from one face or the other, but nothing from the side. The images were generally of a low resolution, so the information available for me to use was somewhat limited. But that was the point, an image is a pale substitute if information is required.


w/e 01.02.13 – Foster and Partners


This week starts with a trip to London, combining a visit to my dealer, Adrian Sassoon to discuss new work and forthcoming exhibitions. On Tuesday I will be visiting Foster and Partners with my colleague Toby Heys in order to see the work of Xavier de Kestelier and his Specialist Modelling group. It should be very interesting as they have a focus on 3D printing, including an exploration in conjunction with Enrico Dini of D-Shape to print buildings on the Moon from moon dust!

Later…
The visit went well, it’s a busy place overlooking the Thames, with hundreds of people beavering away on various projects. Xavier is responsible for Special projects and leads a problem-solving group who address a myriad of technical solutions.
My instinct is that our proposal needs to be at a much more advanced stage; really we need to have successfully completed a feasibility study and be at the proof of concept stage before Fosters would come on board. So we’re a little way off.
Whilst there I caught up with Gregor Anderson, who was a great help to me, both at the RCA and sorting out my data whilst he worked at the Digital Manufacturing Centre at the Bartlett. He runs the superbly equipped 3D modeling facilities at Fosters and appears to be very happy in his new role.


w/e 01.03.13

Vicky and I just spent 4 days in Venice, our first trip to the city. What a great place, lovely to get away from cars and enjoy the more leisurely pace of boats and walking. It wasn’t as busy as it can be and the weather, though perishing cold when we arrived better than forecast. So we explored and ate and explored and ate. And slept really well. We saw some of the famous sights, but also got off the beaten track exploring the Fondamenti and Calle of Canneregio, the quitter, northern sesterei of Venice. And I have my first experience of a Tadao Ando building, or rather a warehouse converted into an Art Gallery by him for Francois Pinault. The Punta della Dogana is right down on the tip of Dorsoduro and well worth the vaporetto fare. And the walk back to our hotel in Santa Croce was well worth it.
Vicky was keen to search the churches for painting by Titian, as she is giving a talk on the subject soon, but in terms of generating ideas for my own work the strongest impression was of hands, particularly their use in reliquaries. There were a good number of them, places like the Basilica dei Frari had a collection of them. The hand gestures vary, sometimes the fingers are bending forward and sometimes the hand is exaggeratedly elongated. Most have glass windows in the ‘wrists’ allowing a view of the supposed relic. In the paintings adorning the walls of museums and churches the painters appear to have given a lot of significance to hands. They are always expressive, stretching, reaching, imploring, rarely at rest. As they were always painted by the master, I suppose they were a statement of his skill, but they help to create a dynamic composition, a moment frozen in time.
Since our return, I have spent some time thinking about using hands as a starting point for a new piece of work. Hands are full of symbolic meaning and would make an engaging vehicle to explore.


w/e 08.03.13

 Alongside finishing the Vncnns piece for Adrian Sassoon, which will be shown at TEFAF in Maastricht shortly, my focus at MIRIAD has been on continuing to struggle with the Mcor Matrix 3D printer and help put together a grant application for the Graphene project.
Things moved forward in both areas, as Mcor have offered to print my Prtlnd vase parts and we had a promising meeting with Craig Banks, an MMU electro-chemist whose research focuses on Graphene applications. We think that we have the makings of a strong application (or two), so watch this space.
And talking of grants, my internal MMU large bid was successful, so I have about £6000 to spend on the restoration of the ZCorp printer.

On Tuesday, I had a scenic train ride to Sheffield where the architect, Sarah Wigglesworth had invited me to speak alongside the ceramic artist, Natasha Daintry on the theme of The Thinking Craftsperson. We both gave 15-minute presentations that led to a prolonged discussion and Q & A session. Sarah realizes that architecture students have little opportunity to engage in making and understand the thinking that underpins craft. Judging by the reaction, there is a strong case for the introduction of some sort of making sessions for architecture students and not just in Sheffield.

And then on Wednesday, I spent the day at the lovely Liverpool Hope University Creative Campus as a mentor on a Crafts Council Hothouse day. I was one of 3 mentors working with 10 emerging makers who have been selected to take part in the scheme to support them through the early stages of their careers, providing guidance on all aspects of their practice.
We used Edward de Bono’s 6 Thinking Hats method to engage in a thorough analysis of their work. The technique is very effective in maintaining the focus of a discussion and making sure it doesn’t stray off the subject.