Across
- 3. A type of low-firing process for ceramics, originating from Japan, known for its unpredictable and unique glaze effects from using items such as horse hair
- 4. Liquified clay
- 9. A furnace or oven used for firing ceramics or clay sculptures to a specific temperature
- 10. Large-scale, immersive artworks created for a specific space, often transforming the viewer's experience.
- 11. a skeleton or framework used by an artist to support a figure being modeled in soft plastic material.
- 12. coloring polymer clay
- 13. a method of molding, carving, or stamping in which the design stands out from the surface to a lesser extent than in high relief
- 14. a stiff, sticky fine-grained earth, typically yellow, red, or bluish-gray in color and often forming an impermeable layer in the soil. It can be molded when wet, and is dried and baked to make bricks, pottery, and ceramics.
- 15. term for pots that have been fired for the first time
Down
- 1. using tools to shape something from a material by scraping away portions of that material.
- 2. lasting for a very short time.
- 4. the art of making three-dimensional representative or abstract forms, especially by carving stone or wood or by casting metal or plaster
- 5. Sculptures that incorporate movement, either through mechanical means or by responding to environmental factors such as wind or touch.
- 6. dense pottery fired at high temperatures to make it resistant to liquids, or non-porous
- 7. vitrified pottery with a white, fine-grained body that is usually translucent
- 8. a liquid suspension of finely ground minerals, that after being applied to the bisque-fired clay form and heated to the proper temperature, melt to form a glassy coating on the clay surface.
