Articles
Art Tiles: Aesthetics of Pleasure
Article by Philip Read
                 Art Tiles are so described as to differentiate the hand-
                 made/hand-painted tiles from the die cast mass-produced
                 tiles. Tiles have had a long history of artistic and creative
                 design. Currently, the social perception of the term ‘tiles’ has
                 relegated the industry to an inexpensive commodity status
                 indicating a separation from the high arts. This has not
                 always been the case, the introduction of the machine
                 produced tiles witnessed the gradual decrease of the hand as
                 playing a major role in the production or painting of the tiles.
                 In the 1840’s the ‘dust-pressing’ a method that consisted of
                 compressing nearly dry clay between two metal dies
revolutionized the tile making industry. Dust pressing replaced tile-making by
hand with wet clay, and facilitated the mechanization of the tile-making
industry.
Today, artisans use the term Art Tiles to identify their tiles as hand-made,
hand-prepared and hand painted. This means that all tiles are made from wet
clay and are individually prepared for painting by smoothing the surface and
edges. The decoration is applied by hand techniques such as brush, scraffito,
luster, tube and transfer printing.
Historical Context
The history of tiles is truly a global affair. Tiles can be traced back at least
4000 years into areas of China, Persia, Greece, Egypt, Mesopotamia (present
day Iraq) and Europe through Spain and Italy. They have been excavated at
the pyramids, the ruins of Babylon and ruins of the ancient Greek cities. Tiles
were originally used to beautify living spaces and were applied on walls and
floors. Early designs exhibited decorations of white and blue stripes and later
exhibited a wider decoration of patterns and colours. A fine white stoneware
with glaze was found from the Shang-Yin Dynasty of China, 1523–1028 BC.
In the 10th and 11th Centuries a process that included a glassy layer over the
clay was developed in Mesopotamia, Persia and Egypt. Families of potters
moved to Spain from the Andalusia hub and Mediterranean strip of the Iberian
Peninsula. This tile method was introduced to Europe with the Arab invasion
of Spain where we still see the architectonic application of tiles on the greater
mosque of Seville of the 12th century. Incredible architectural examples of
Arab building tiles can still be seen throughout Spain especially at the
Alhambra. Spain and Italy were prime markets for the development of tiles in
Europe specifically in the 14th and 15th centuries. At this time the hand made
production of tiles required an extremely specialized division of labour that
involved tile makers and tile decorators.
Towards the 1500 the cities of Seville and Toledo took over the production of
tiles. These cities developed new techniques for the making of tiles; they are
credited with the appearance of the first mass production process.
During the 1840’s the tile industry was revolutionized by the ‘dust pressing’
method that consisted of compressing nearly dry clay between two metal dies.
Subsequently, in the 19th Century and beginning of the 20th century, the tile
industry entered a pre industrial stage that greatly increased the mechanized
production and volume of tiles.
Prior to the 1840’s, tiles were hand-made, that is to say, that each tile was
hand-formed and hand-painted making each tile a work of art in its own right.
Today, ceramic tile is not hand-made or hand-painted for the most part.
Automated manufacturing techniques are used and the human had does not
enter into the picture until it is time to install the tile.
The introduction of the term Art Tile in the last 20 years is meant to promote
the individual tile artist who still uses the hand to make, form and decorate the
tiles. This term distinguishes the small studio tile artist from the mass
produced industrial tile and promotes the return of the labour intensive artistic
method of making tiles. Some tile artists will purchase standard mass
produced bisque or glazed tile and then hand-paint the decoration. Other
artists chose to hand-make, prepare and hand-paint the individual tiles. This
later choice greatly increases the individual tile labour and dramatically
impacts the volume of tiles produced. However, this later method uniquely
individualizes each tile as a work of art, thus the Art Tile.
Personal Style and Technique
                   I chose to work only in ceramic porcelain clay; it is the
                   smoothest of clay bodies and is excellent for painting. This
                   choice started for me in 1995 when I went to the ancient city
                   Jingdezhen, China to study painting and tile making with the
                   many studio artists who still use the hands to make and
                   decorate tiles. Jingdezhen has been the center of porcelain
                   clay production for the past 1000years due to the abundant
                   supply of Kaolin clay which is unique to the production of
                   the white clay body. I was especially interested in the large
                   tiles of 20” to 24” which offered a large smooth surface to
                   paint on. All of my large tiles are hand made and hand
prepared. I do not use a slab roller and maintain the thickness around one
centimeter or 3/8” to ½”. Although this is a labour intensive process and fragile
method I have been able to develop a success rate above 90% after firing.
The drying process takes up to three weeks and is a critical stage in the
survival of the tile. During this drying period I have developed a series of
coverings to slow down the dry rate that can lead to cracking and warping.
After the tile has dried completely I can then start the painting process. I only
work with Green Ware, no pre firing bisque because I have found that the dry
clay has absorbency similar to paper. My painting technique is a combination
of Eastern and Western brush applications. These brush techniques often
require a series of dabs rather than a drawing stroke, the difference develops
a layering process that will not smear or create smudge appearances. Of
course, the detail work requires the delicate brush stroke application. I have
found that this combination of dabs and drawing strokes gives me the
maximum freedom of expression over a broad range of composition. My
palette includes cobalt blue, under glaze colours, and glazes in combinations
that enrich the aesthetic beauty of the artwork.
Once the tile painting is complete I apply a clear glaze over the top and move
to the kiln stage. The Kiln stage is a very critical stage for the success of the
large 24” green ware tiles. Moving the large green ware tiles to the kiln
shelves is a very delicate and cautious stage, they can break very easy.
My firing process involves both vertical and horizontal firings. I use a gas fired
reduction firing and/or an electric oxidation firing. Typically, I once fire up to
1350’c and then may have 2-4 subsequent firings including vertical firings.
I chose to hand-form, prepare and hand paint all of my porcelain tiles. As a
small studio artisan I can never compete with the large mass-producing tile
companies. Art Tiles currently have a niche market and serves customers who
wish to have a unique one of a kind artwork to decorate their home.
                  I often describe my art making as painting with powdered
                  glass suspended in water. My painting style is somewhat
                  unorthodox and took me over 5years to develop. It is a brush
                  application technique of dabbing and layering that results in
                  the glaze melting and fusing into unexpected and exciting
                  pools of liquid glass. These translucent layers of glass fuse
                  onto the white porcelain clay and result in images of soft and
                  strong colour compositions. My paintings are the influence of
                  Western techniques (watercolours, oil, acrylic painting
                  techniques) and Eastern techniques (ink and wash paintings
                  on rice paper) combined with the aesthetics and philosophies
of cross culture studies.
Aesthetics of Pleasure
The aesthetics of our personal environment is an important issue in the
emergence and continuing development of Art Tiles. The aesthetics or beauty
of an artwork responds to the individual’s pleasure principle and an emotion is
evoked. An emotional relationship is formed, a bond of pleasure. Works of art
provokes emotion and all of us react accordingly to specific compositions.
However, when works of art are perceived to be commodity the relationship
changes to one of decorative function the emotion is removed from the
observation and the relationship remains formal.
Craft is often described as the production of a thing having characteristics that
could be shared by other things. This sharing evokes a general emotion and
not a specific emotion as evoked by an individual work of art like a painting or
sculpture. Art Tiles have a limited niche market primarily due to cost. The Art
Tiles are sold as works of art and are priced accordingly. They are not made
to compete directly with the mass produced tiles but are sold to accent living
spaces surrounded by inexpensive mass produced tiles. As such, someone
will purchase individual tiles because of there beauty and aesthetic appeal but
that is the beauty of Art Tiles; affordable, beautiful, archival (another loaded
word), and durable.
               Article courtesy Philip Read, Mountain Path Studio. ©
Philip Read has an MFA in Studio Art and Critical Theory and a BA in
Interdisciplinary Arts. He studied Eastern art (Sumi-e, Chinese Ink and Wash
painting) for over 21yrs; and independant studied at Jingdezhen Ceramic
University in Jingdezhen, Jiangxu, South China.
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