Ceramics:
Geologic Lens - Systemic Practice
John Roloff
Published: International Ceramic Symposium - Ceramics &
Ecology Catalog, 5th World Ceramic Biennale, World Ceramic
Exposition Foundation, Icheon, Republic of Korea, 2009, pg 38-42.
Text for Special Lecture, 2nd Session - Ceramics and Ecology: New Prospects, The 5th International Ceramic
Symposium – WOCEF Conference Hall, Ceramic R&D Center, Icheon, Korea,
April 26, 2009.
http://www.wocef.com/eng_2009/biennale/02_02_07.asp
Note: Section II – Case
Study: Cretaceous Split Rock Formation: Anthropocene Transformation, was
not included in the International Ceramic Symposium - Ceramics & Ecology
Catalog text, but was adapted from the audio portion of the Symposium Special
Lecture presentation. Other projects discussed in the Symposium
presentation not included in the published text include: Soda Boat, 1973 and Encased
Piece, 1979.
Section I
Geologic Lens:
The origin, life cycle and
existential nature of the planet earth may be thought of in terms common to
both ceramics and geology. Primal elements of fire and earth, intrinsic to any
definition of ceramics are also fundamental to the geologic interpretation of
the physical earth. This analogy of the geologic
lens includes a full range of organic and inorganic materials and processes
such as igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary rocks, geo-biotic assemblages and
the morphologies of their denudative and generative processes, including
parallel human constructs. From
this concept, an extended definition of the materiality and processes of
ceramics may be extrapolated and new associative structures proposed and
examined. In this light, from
nature throughout geologic time, ceramic-like structures could include:
deposits of calcareous and siliceous ooze on oceanic basins, stratigraphic
structures of terrestrial silt, mud and sandstone as well as
intrusive/extrusive bodies of igneous and metamorphic rock. By similar association into the
Anthropocene1 Epoch, or current human era, ceramics may include:
civic highway/hydrologic systems, skyscrapers, agricultural fields, earthworks,
ceramic objects, among many others.
By the addition of a broader scale of geologic terminology, context and
concepts such as: intrusion, erosion, deposition, diagenesis, metasomatism,
facies, geochrono- and allo-stratigraphy, etc., to the already partially
geology-engaged language of ceramics, a discourse opens to new landscapes,
timescapes and ecologies with cross-generative potential. This extended language can stimulate
the creation of useful analogs of human activity and the human-built
environment within natural systems and consciousness to vitalize forms of
systemic practice for art, architecture, industry that both enriches our
understanding of materiality and process as well as potentially creating a
coequal relationship with our environment. Cities, architecture, roads and other civic constructions
made by mankind of earth materials during the Anthropocene Epoch, may also be
described as forms of anthroturbation2, which describes the
disturbance, dislocation and restructuring of geologic formations and materials
by human agencies into new forms.
In addition to the anthroturbational analogies of: mining as erosion,
transport as flow and construction as sedimentation, the built topography of a
city can be understood in geomorphic terms: streets as canyons, buildings as
plateaus, sewers as caves and plazas as playas.
Section II
Case Study: Cretaceous Split Rock Formation: Anthropocene
Transformation
When comparing the erosion structures of mankind, such as a marble quarry in Italy, and nature, as in the Grand Canyon in America, one finds a difference in context and time scale, but the idea of denudation or removal as in erosion in the creation of the structure and transformation of materials is common to both. These are examples of seeking similarity rather than difference between human and natural processes. A case study that that will illustrate this concept in more depth involves the Split Rock Formation. The Split Rock Formation is a stratigraphic assemblage that was deposited in estuarine environments along the eastern edge of the Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway, bisecting the North American continent, about 100 million years ago, near what is now the South Dakota-Minnesota border. The estuarine environment varied between marine and fluvial, depositing a range of clays, sandstones, silts and mudstones over many thousands of years. This deposit is now being quarried near Springfield, MN for the extraction of shale and clay for the manufacture of bricks. The strata in the quarry exposed by the machinery of extraction presents a visual snapshot of the materials geologic history from which a geologist can discern the environment and conditions of deposition and the Cretaceous paleogeography. In the quarry, the erosion by mechanical systems and transport to storage areas for processing have geologic analogs of denudation, transport and temporary deposition. After the processing and shaping of the materials into raw bricks of which there are additional geologic analogs of turbulence, compression, shearing and deposition onto kiln cars, the bricks are ready for metamorphosis by fire into a new state of lithification which we know as fired brick. Within this whole process other structures are developed including: assemblages of broken brick compiled by bull-dozers with the analogy of clastic moraines alluding to glacial processes and the formal stratigraphic structures of stacks waiting for transport to market. The final state, or final for the time being, of some of these bricks can be found on the faade of Rapson Hall, School of Design at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, MN. This state of vertical assemblage between cementaceous bonding structures (known as cement mortar) will likely end up in a land-fill or recycled when a new building is built and ultimately returned to the earth at some point in some form.
As one stands on the shore of the Mississippi River nearby where it has cut deeply into the underlying sediment, looking towards the campus one can see the buildings of the University sitting above the Pleistocene (or less than 1 million year old) glacial till and river outwash sediments resting directly on 350 million year old Paleozoic sediments. This missing approximately 349 million years is called an unconformity, of which that material has been eroded away before the Pleistocene and is probably now deposited to the south perhaps in the Gulf of Mexico or in sites in between. The University buildings become part of this stratigraphic assemblage as an Anthropocene layer, deposited by human agency.
The research for this case study and the transformation of materials from that Cretaceous estuarine environment into an Anthropocene structure, is part of a project I am working on at the University of Minnesota called SITE INDEX, that includes collaboration with UMN faculty and landscape architect, Rebecca Krinke. We are designing four gardens for the School of Design complex. The geologic history of the brick will be one of four etchings of text directly on the parent material, the other materials being copper, glass and concrete. Like the brick, the other materials are geologically analyzed in an attempt to fundamentally understand that material. This may be thought of metaphorically as the geologist from Mars, who comes to Earth and cannot tell the difference between a hillside and a building and asks the question of each structure, what is this, of what is it made and where did it come from?
Section
III
Systemic Practice
There are numerous instances
in my work that engage systemic practice and geologic references, thought and
research. A series of seminal
environmental performance/kiln works from 1979 to 1992 were inspired by my
studies of geology and oceanography as a student at UC Davis, Davis, CA, in the
late 1960s (this research is still very much ongoing). For me, the materials of sculpture and
ceramics are perceived and worked with from the viewpoint of natural origin,
process and scale; dolomite, kaolin, feldspar, etc., existing a powders in the
glaze room made up rock formations I had studied in a geologic context. This adjustment of scale and context
was further informed by a strong interest in the work of 19th century landscape
artists such as Turner, Homer and Kennsett. An exemplary kiln work, Land Monitor/Fired Volcanic Boulder,
1980, examines volcanic geologic process and materiality. In this work, the steel and
ceramic fiber blanket kiln was removed at the peak of the firing to expose a
mafic (high iron/magnesium – low silica) basalt boulder in an attempt for
the viewer to physically re-experience the boulder's birth/origin by returning
it to a near-molten state. The firing took place near an extinct Pleistocene
volcano field in the desert outside Albuquerque New Mexico.
A series of 3 kiln works, Untitled (Earth Orchid), Hartford, CT,
1988, Oculus: Dead Sea/Oil Field,
Arvada, CO, 1989, and Humboldt Ship,
Arcata, CA, 1989 are grouped under the
title of 51 Million BTUs (BTU -
British Thermal Unit, is a scientific term for the measurement of energy) which
is the total calculated energy expended in the firing of these projects. This series in itself makes an initial
exploration through form, image and process of the solar/botanical/geologic
origin of fossil fuels and the transformative energy released by their
ignition. As an example, Untitled (Earth Orchid) examines
botanical form by the ignition of natural gas into radiant energy within the
central core of a kiln/furnace shaped to resemble the cross-section of an
abstract orchid.
Further engaging the energy/metabolic
issues of 51 Million BTUs is a
two-part project, Phase I and Phase II: 51 Million BTUs/Metabolism
Study/C3H8, e-, NaCl, 1991-2008. Both are video installations engaged
with the transformation of energy expended in 51 Million BTUs. Using the projection of video on a
rock-salt-surfaced screen, 51 Million
BTUs/ Metabolism Study/C3H8, e-, NaCl,
visually and metaphorically expatiates upon scientific ideas initiated in the
site projects about the ancient solar origin of fossil fuels. These concepts briefly state that
Mesozoic-Cenozoic sunlight shining on ancient forests and mats of algae
floating on ancient seas was transformed along with atmospheric CO2
by photosynthesis into energy laden organic materials. These materials were later deposited
and further transformed by geologic processes into what are now called fossil
fuels. The ignition and
transformation of fossil fuels in the site projects releases the stored ancient
sunlight in the form of radiant energy.
In a prototype version, Phase I:
51 Million BTUs/Metabolism Study/C3H8,
e-, NaCl, 1991-1993, a single three-tube video projector was
used to project an interwoven sequence of the furnace firings onto the rock
salt screen. The salt crystal screen references the generally marine
environment in which botanic materials were originally deposited. The crystals
also act as prisms to diffract the projected video image breaking down its
visual structure. The projected images in this prototype version underwent a
partial transformation towards sunlight, still retaining much of their form. Phase II: 51 Million BTUs/Metabolism Study/C3H8, e-,
NaCl, 1991-2008, employs three, 3 high-intensity LCD projectors also
projecting onto a heavily rock salt encrusted screen and completely powered by
contemporary sunlight through the use of solar voltaic panels. The use of three video projectors
serves to completely transform the projected image into an intense,
undifferentiated light reminiscent of sunlight. Simultaneous sound and image of non-diffracted video is seen
on adjacent monitors so the viewer can see the degree of transformation taking
place.
Rotting
Flame, 1994-2009, shown as part of
the exhibition: World Contemporary Ceramics: Adventures of the Fire, is an instrument of chemical transformation
and time. The processes of fire
and decay are essentially two forms of oxidation, fire is relatively fast and
decay is much slower. In this
sense Rotting Flame is the image of
fire animated within the time frame of the decay of oranges. The orange color of the citrus also
parallels the incandescence and final oxidation of carbon particles in the
brightest part of a flame. Important antecedents to Rotting Flame were the performance/kiln projects in which fire was
the essential agent of physical and durational change. Land Monitor/Fired Volcanic Boulder, 1980, Wave Kiln (of Fire), 1984, Untitled
(Earth Orchid), 1988 and Metabolism
and Mortality/O2, 1992 are exemplary of this series. In these environmental projects the
fire was an agent of change in the geologic sense, used to alter earth
materials within a site-developed kiln structure; here geologic time was
compressed into human time by speeding up the normally glacial rate of geologic
transformations.
A site-related work, Devonian Shale
(Aquifer I), 2000, examines
anthroturbation in relationship to contemporary and ancient geologic
landscapes. The structural dynamics of a drainage/irrigation system
interacting with physical and historical properties of a geologic formation constitute
the conceptual basis for Devonian Shale:
Aquifer I. This project was
developed by working with a site in western New York state near Alfred
University that embodied two related but distant time dimensions: recently, as
an abandoned surface mine for shale/clay used to produce roofing tile and
bricks by local ceramic factories in the late 1800s and geologically as a
exposure of shale and sandstone strata deposited in a shallow sea during the
Devonian era, now the shale acts as an active aquifer system. The core structure of the artwork is
made of the sites Devonian shale, processed, extruded and fired in a manner
similar to the technology of the early ceramic factories. A further process of coating and firing
the armature with a slurry of indigenous sediment each time it is exhibited
creates a new site-evolved stratigraphic structure in contemporary time. The
modular and extensible configuration of this work refers to the original sea
floors of Devonian time where the shale was deposited as mud and fine
silt. This process of deposition
underwent a continual, fractal reiteration through geologic time creating
strata after broad horizontal strata.
The immense surface area of this compiled shale formation approaches in
concept the integral process of mathematics, where a function is "allowed
to approach infinity" to calculate a theoretically impossible surface
area, itself an analogy to the incomprehensibility of geologic time. In our contemporary era this
fractal/infinitesimal dimension is continued through this stratigraphic
assemblages activity as an aquifer and living filter where hydrostatic
pressure is driving water molecules through protracted and unimaginable
passages along surfaces laid down over 350 million years ago. A dynamic correlation may be said to
exist between the continuous multiplicity of events occurring during deposition
(the turbidinal effects of particle descent and settling) and the inflection of
that process during lithification of the silt into slate and the subsequent dendritic
flow of water in the aquifer. This
process is diagrammatically referenced by Devonian Shale (Aquifer I),s vector-like
drainage/irrigation layout, re-stratification process and theoretically
unlimited size.
In a recent project, Yerba Buena Complex, 2008, A park area
in San Francisco, CA, Yerba Buena Gardens, where the project was displayed,
considers the Gardens an Anthropocene Epoch structural geologic deposit of
various origins resting unconformably on Cenozoic sediments above the Alcatraz
Terrane of the Franciscan Complex, the bedrock formation of most of the San
Francisco area. This relationship
was initially examined symbolically and materially by the public sculpture, Deep Gradient/Suspect Terrain, in the
form of a descending ship made of steel and green glass, containing ocean floor
sediments extracted 4 miles off the California coast, installed on the Yerba
Buena site in 1993. In the exhibition, Bay Area Now 5, at the Yerba Buena
Center for the Arts, in Yerba Buena Gardens, Yerba Buena Complex structurally and conceptually extends this
inquiry further into the Yerba Buena site by tectonic installation of green
filters into the architecture of the Center for the Arts and video imagery of
the construction of Yerba Buena Gardens and gathering of sediment for Deep Gradient/Suspect Terrain... An initial expression of research into
the allochthonous origin of the aluminum cladding of the Center for the Arts is
also intended as an element of Yerba Buena Complex. The symbolism of transparent green,
referring to the deep-sea depositional environment of the Franciscan Complex
sediments, analogs of transport and displacement of sediment, both in time and
distance, from previous landscapes and accretionary processes, are extended and
reconfigured in, Yerba Buena Complex. In conjunction with the green
depositional symbolism, the video documentation of raw materiality and process
examine an analog of humanity as an anthroturbational agent of denudation and
formation, at some level indistinct from that of nature.
1. Crutzen, Paul, International
Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP), newsletter
no. 41, 2000. Anthropocene: a term used to
describe the current geological period, starting from the 18th century when
human activities began to impact global climate and ecosystems.
Roloff, John,
expanded definition of Anthropocene: a term used to describe the current
geological period as a subset of the Holocene geologic epoch, beginning with
the Neolithic period, the onset of agriculture and city states, approximately 9000 BC, marking a shift
from paleolithic attitudes of humans towards nature that began a period
continuing to the present of significant impact of human activities on global
ecosystems (including climate) in the form of anthroturbation (see No. 2 below).
2. Paul Spudich, USGS Geophysicist,
Anthroturbation: a term developed in conversation with John Roloff, 1999.