Showing posts with label architectural terracotta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label architectural terracotta. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Just call me Miss Terracotta...


I've have been awarded a Churchill 
Travelling Fellowship!!! 
Winston Churchill Memorial Trust

This changes everything....

The project of my imagining is:
Architectural Terracotta: 
An exploration of Transatlantic Opportunity


105 Churchill Fellows have been selected from 942 applicants. And I'm one of them! Stunned and gratefully so.

I'm being fully funded to spend 8 weeks travelling across the UK and the USA. It's all about clay as a key material for building, understanding applications and techniques in the past and for the future.


I'll be meeting the key makers, the huge manufacturers as well as the creative independents, the architects and commissioning bodies who choose this exciting material to adorn our urban landscape with. I'm making all my own travel plans and contacts and have the doors wide open to all working in the industry in both continents.


This fantastic opportunity gives me an unique insight into the industry to understand first hand the differences in the uses of terracotta in the US compared to here. I'll be finding out about historic methods of making and how they've changed over the years. I'm also excited to learn about the innovative new techniques and what opportunities technology offer and how they change the end product and how terracotta can be applied.

I'm visiting:
Chicago - the birthplace of the skyscraper - this city is built of terracotta
New York - I'll visit all the major terracotta sites and meet the major manufactures and architectural bodies based in NYC, including Shaws of Darwen, a large UK company.
San Francisco - I'll meet independent makers and ceramicists here
Sacremento - Visit Gladding McBean - one of the largest and oldest manufacturers still in business

I’ll be posting photos and stories of what I find throughout my travels and experiences here. Save this blog. And get involved if you'd like to... please leave comments and join me on my journey….

When I arrive back, in September, I'll be arranging talks and presentations across the country to share what I've found and get everyone as exciting about terracotta as I am. 
If you would like to be involved or contribute to my research, host a presentation, or would like to be invited to any events, I’d be happy to hear from you. Please email me to register your interest: amyfrankiesmith@gmail.com

Must go, I have a travels to plan and exciting people and places to see and meet!

Thursday, 3 February 2011

STOP PRESS!!

Medina baths hit the wider Brighton again press this week:

"An eyesore building will not be left to rot, according to city planners"

Monday, 24 January 2011

STOP PRESS!!

I'm featured in this week's Latest Homes magazine!

A published article featuring my research and photography in gives an insight into the importance and interest of Medina House is available now throughout Brighton & Hove and online.

Sunday, 9 January 2011

A day at the V&A

To relax and find some space to think after my interview I headed straight for the Victoria and Albert Museum. I wandered straight into the Rennaisance gallery, struck with awe and wonder with my thoughts drifting to Italy...

I decided to sit down and write down how the interview went so I could move on from pondering the events of those 15 minutes and make space to take on the Centuries of history I was to be delighted by.
Pair of kneeling Angels
1450-1525
Probably Andrea della Robbia
The della Robbia family dominated the production of tin-glazed terracotta in Florence at this time, keeping their receipes secret.

If you look closely at where the glaze has come away from the figure, in the photo above, you'll see the buff colour of the clay and perhaps a layer of engobe that might have been applied before the tin glaze to ensure the glaze fit.

Winston Churchill Fellowship

I've been shortlisted for the Winston Churchill Travelling Fellowship! Have a look here.

I’ve found the whole experience of applying for the Travelling Fellowship a very valuable one. The prospect of planning a trip (up to 3 months) to study and explore a project of one’s own defining is very exciting. I’ve loved the opportunity to dream and have become excited beyond words in imagining where I might go, who I would meet and the projects and companies I might be involved with. I’ve also found it immensely encouraging in speaking to professionals and practitioners in the field. It’s not difficult for the excitement to gain momentum when discussing a project and it’s possibilities. 


I'm sure positive projects will form out of this application experience alone. I also promise myself I will build on the positive contacts I have made and cement them for the future regardless of the Fellowship decision. I dare not wonder any further where being awarded the fellowship may take me!... for the time being back to the real world… but fingers x crossed!