Forming digital kinships with earthen materials. The T-Stool

Authors

  • Rhett Russo Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), Troy NY (USA)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19229/2464-9309/10212021

Keywords:

ceramics, structure as design, digital twin, press-molding, silicone rubber molds

Abstract

This paper aims to address how the ceramic process has been conceptualized to develop a new kinship between ceramic and its counterparts through digital technology. The interface between ceramic materials and digital fabrication, outlined here initiates a new collaboration between the real and the digital, whose interactions are tentacular. The design framework aims to rigorously leverage the vibrancy of matter in the design process. The methodology chronicles the fabrication of the T-Stool, as part of interdisciplinary collaboration, to develop a novel press-molding technique for stoneware that uses a two-part, silicone rubber and epoxy mold. The T-Stool was executed in stoneware through the use of a digital twin as a data source for material speculation, to track transformations in the clay, and to implement the use of custom tools.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Metrics Graph

Author Biography

Rhett Russo, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), Troy NY (USA)

He is an Assistant Professor in the School of Architecture. He is the recipient of several project residencies at the European Ceramic Work Center and a recipient of the Young Architects Award from the Architectural League of New York.
E-mail: russor4@rpi.edu

References

Bechthold, M., Kane, A. and King, N. (2015), Ceramic Material Systems – In Architecture and Interior Design, Birkhäuser, Basel.

Bennett, J. (2010), Vibrant Matter – A Political Ecology of Things, Duke University Press, Durham (US).

Canguilhem, G. (1992), “Machine and Organism”, in Crary, J. and Kwinter, S. (eds), Incorporations, Zone Books, New York.

Carty, W. M. (2019), Energy in Terra Cotta – The Balance Between Heat Storage and Strength, lecture in Architectural Ceramic Assemblies Workshop, August 12, 2019. [Online] Available at: archceramicworkshop.com/lectures/ [Accessed 05 November 2021].

Easterling, K. (2021), Medium Design – Knowing How to Work on the World, Verso, London.

Fisher, J. (2005), “Making the Link – Persuasion and Permanence”, in Reijnders, A. and European Ceramic Work Center (eds), The Ceramic Process – A Manual and Source of Inspiration for Ceramic Art and Design, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, pp. 7-9.

Garcia, T. (2014), Form and Object – A Treatise on Things, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh.

Gorter, H. (2005), “Material method and process”, in Reijnders, A. and European Ceramic Work Center (eds), The Ceramic Process – A Manual and Source of Inspiration for Ceramic Art and Design, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, pp. 17-21.

Grieves, M. W. (2019), “Virtually Intelligent Product Systems – Digital and Physical Twins”, in Flumerfelt, S., Schwartz, K. G., Mavris, D. and Briceno, S. (eds), Complex Systems Engineering – Theory and Practice, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Reston (US), pp. 175-200. [Online] Available at: doi.org/10.2514/5.9781624105654.0175.0200 [Accessed 26 October 2021].

Haraway, D. J. (2016), Staying with the Trouble – Making Kin in the Chthulucene, Duke University Press, Durham (US).

Harman, G. (2011), The Quadruple Object, Zero Books, Winchester (UK).

Iten, C. (2008), “Ceramics Mended with Lacquer – Fundamental Aesthetic Principles, Techniques and Artistic Concepts”, in Herbert, F. and Johnson Museum of Art (eds), Flickwerk – The Aesthetics of Mended Japanese Ceramics, Museum für Lackkunst, pp. 18-24. [Online] Available at annacolibri.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Flickwerk_The_Aesthetics_of_Mended_ Japanese_Ceramics.pdf [Accessed 05 November 2021].

May, J. (2017), “Everything Is Already an Image”, in Log, n. 40, pp. 9-26. [Online] Available at: jstor.org/stable/26323867 [Accessed 26 April 2021].

Reijnders, A. and European Ceramic Work Center (eds) (2005), The Ceramic Process – A Manual and Source of Inspiration for Ceramic Art and Design, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.

Russo, R. and Mueller-Russo, K. (2012), “Textiles – Alternate Forms of Malleability”, in Studies in Material Thinking, vol. 7, pp. 1-9. [Online] Available at: materialthinking.org/sites/default/files/papers/SMT_V7_P9_ Russo_and_Russo.pdf [Accessed 26 April 2021].

Sentance, B. (2004), Ceramics – A World Guide to Traditional Techniques, Thames & Hudson, London.

T-Stool, Press molded stoneware, approximately 20 cm l. x 12 cm h. x 14 cm w. Series of 3. Platina luster, 1-3); Matte white glaze, 3-3; Pink crackle glaze, 2-3 (credit: Sundaymorning@ekwc, 2013). AGATHÓN 10 | 2021

Downloads

Published

31-12-2021

How to Cite

Russo, R. (2021) “Forming digital kinships with earthen materials. The T-Stool”, AGATHÓN | International Journal of Architecture, Art and Design, 10(online), pp. 230–241. doi: 10.19229/2464-9309/10212021.

Issue

Section

Design | Research & Experimentation
No Related Submission Found