2009.009.007
Object Name
Plate, Decorative
Artist/Maker
L Burke
Date Made
1/1/1973
Materials
Ceramic
Catalogue Number
2009.009.007
Dimensions

Diameter: 23.3cm Height: 3.5cm

Description

Glazed ceramic raku plate, made in the western style. Circular plate with raised sides and a flattened lip around the edge. The lip has four pairs of holes spaced evenly around it and four sets of pinch marks between the holes. The surface of the plate is partially glazed in a blue/brown colour with raised sections across the surface. The edge, lip and back of the plate are not glazed and are a dark grey colour. On the back of the plate "L. Burke Napanee Ont" has been carved into the surface.

History

In 1973 the City of Kingston celebrated the tercentenary of its founding as a fur trading post in 1673. To mark the anniversary, the Kingston Potters' Guild, then known as the Ceramicists Guild of Kingston, gave the City 33 glazed plates handmade by local potters . These plates are examples of a Japanese firing technique known as "Raku" which refers to joy, harmony, peace, and contentment. With the Raku method each piece is handled individually and must undergo a dual thermal shock. The item is first placed in a hot kiln and stays until the glaze is melted and shiny at 1000 degrees Celsius. The glowing piece is pulled from the kiln and carefully embedded in combustible materials such as straw and sawdust. The combustible packing materials leave marks in the soft, hot glaze and affect the object's colouring. After 30 to 45 minutes, the piece is taken out and cleaned to reveal its colourful surface. Raku pottery is more porous and fragile than stoneware and no two pieces are alike.