Form
Gabriele Koch
Life Story
Gabriele Koch’s vessels are seductive and atmospheric, striking in their balance of precision and fluidity. The taut, smooth surface gently pools and submerges in the middle, creating a shallow interior space that draws the viewer into the centre of the form. Koch’s work explores the vessel as an abstract sculptural form and here, as the interior and exterior merge into one. Koch cites artists and architects including Le Corbusier, Anish Kapoor and Ruth Duckworth as reference points for her interpretation of space and volume. [1]
The surface pattern feels alive and is reminiscent of geology and skies. This elemental quality of Koch’s work derives from her processes of burnishing and smoke-firing. These are also techniques her work shares with indigenous American and African pottery, and it was after seeing examples of these types of burnished pots in museums that she pursued this approach in her work. [2]
Koch constructs her forms in layers by hand using the coiling technique. Once the form is complete and nearly dry a coloured slip is added. The pot is then burnished with a metal spoon before firing – this step is crucial in ensuring the slip adheres. The pots are first biscuit fired and then undergo smoke firing in a small outdoor kiln. Sawdust is placed around the pot which is lit from the top and left to burn. Sometimes the pot is withdrawn before the sawdust is completely burnt. The form is then completed by wax-polishing.
Sim Panaser, June 2020
[1] Jane Perryman, ‘Gabriele Koch’ in Smoke Firing: Contemporary Artists and Approaches, (London: A&C Black, 2008), pp. 55-60, (p. 55). [2] Ibid., p. 57.
Further Reading
Birks, Tony, Gabriele Koch: Hand Building and Smoke Firing, (Catrine: Stenlake, 2009)
Birks, Tony, ‘High Tech: Low Precision’, Ceramic Review, 144 (November/December 1993), 23-27
Perryman, Jane, ‘Gabriele Koch’ in Smoke Firing: Contemporary Artists and Approaches, (London: A&C Black, 2008), pp. 55-60
Not on display
Title/Description: Form
Born: 1992
Measurements: d. 470mm
Accession Number: 50754
Historic Period: 20th century
Copyright: © Gabriele Koch
Credit Line: Accepted under the Cultural Gifts Scheme by HM Government from Leslie Birks Hay and allocated to SCVA, 2016