Coil Containers Pottery Lesson Plan: Sculpture Activities and Lessons for Children and Kids: KinderArt (2024)

Kids will learn how to make coil pots out of clay.

By Lauren Geggus [Laura is in the Art Education program at Illinois State University]

Art Concept: Cultural Influences on Art Forms

Artmaking Processes and Techniques: coil and slab building technique

Art Elements/Principles of Design: form, shape, line, balance, and color

Rationale: Making an art form using processes and techniques influenced by those of a specific culture can help one to better understand that culture as well as be more sensitive to other cultures in general. Incorporating one’s own personalized designs provides the opportunity for individual expression. Learning about the roles of the artists and crafts people in the context of their cultures helps one to better understand the contribution of individuals to that culture.

Objectives:

As a result of this unit, students will:

Artmaking: Build a container with clay, using the coil and slab hand-building techniques. Glaze containers.

Historical/Cultural: Describe several ways various cultures make use of containers.

Criticism: Describe how to use a coil and a slab to create a container.

Aesthetics: Decide if functional pottery can be considered art.

Participation:

Demonstrate a willingness to learn about other cultures by positively contributing to the discussion at least twice during the lesson.

Vocabulary:

Artmaking –

  • Clay is a finely textured mineral substance that is pliable when wet and can be hardened by firing.
  • Coil is a long form of clay that is rolled into a slender snake-like form in order to produce pottery or other ornamental structures.
  • Firing is the hardening of a clay vessel by the application of heat.
  • African pottery was/is not always fired in a kiln but in the open with fuel piled all around and burned.
  • Kiln is an oven used to fire pottery, capable of producing high, controlled heat.
  • Slab is a flat, sliced or pressed mass of clay.
  • Wedging prepares clay to be used by removing air bubbles that may exist.

Historical/Cultural –

  • Artifacts are objects made by human beings that are found and studied by archeologists and historians from a later time to gain knowledge about people and their culture (Day and Alexander, eds., p. G-9)
  • A community can include all the people living in a particular district, city, etc., or the district, city where they live. May also refer to a group of people living together as a smaller social unit within a larger one, and having interests, work, etc., in common.
  • A culture is made up of the behaviors, customs, ideas, and skills shared and transmitted among a group of people. Cultures go through stages of social, economic and technological development. These developmental changes are reflected in the style and type of ceramic artifacts from that culture (Day and Alexander, eds., p. G-9)

Motivation: teacher examples, slides, and books

Student Prerequisite: limited experience with hand building

Instructional Methods:

Examples of ceramics (transparencies and slides) will be shown and discussed. Brief written history of functional pottery will be presented. Teacher demonstration. Hands-On student involvement. Group discussion.

What You Need:

  • clay
  • clay tools
  • canvas/cardboard squares
  • sponges
  • templates/tracers
  • pictures or examples of pottery
  • Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Clay Handout

What You Do:

Day 1

Procedure

(Teacher Directed)

  1. “What is clay?”
  2. Where does it come from?
  3. How do we use clay or how did/do other cultures use clay in their everyday lives?
  4. Show examples of containers.
  5. Describe the different images of containers and the cultures that built them.

Artmaking

(Teacher Directed):

  1. Demonstrate how to form a coil.
  2. Demonstrate how to cut out a slab for the container’s base, using a circle template and how to attach a coil to a slab by pinching.
  3. Demonstrate how to add a handle. (Optional)

(Guided Practice)
Students will:

  1. Use their hands to roll out a coil from a strip of clay.
  2. Trace a circle template on top of a slab to create the base of the container.

(Independent Practice)
Students will:

  1. Build up a container by attaching coils to the circular slab.

Day 2

(Teacher Directed)

  1. After clay containers are dried and fired, students will glaze their artwork.
  2. Demonstrate how to use brushes when applying glaze to the ceramic container. (Always dab!)

(Independent Practice)
Students will…

  1. Apply glaze to their container, using specific dab technique with the brush.
  2. Work on sketchbooks for the remaining time

Criticism/Aesthetics

(Teacher Directed):

  1. How did we create our container? What hand building techniques did we use?
  2. What could our containers be used for?
  3. Can functional containers be considered art?

(Closure)

  1. What new art words did we learn?
  2. What can containers be used for?
  3. How do different cultures use containers?

Coil Containers Pottery Lesson Plan: Sculpture Activities and Lessons for Children and Kids: KinderArt (2)

References:

Acero, R. (2001). Making ceramic sculpture. New York: Lark Books.
Hawkinson, J. (1974). A ball of clay. Chicago: Albert Whitman & Co.
Weisman Topal, C. (1988). Children, clay, and sculpture. Worcester MA: Davis.

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Coil Containers Pottery Lesson Plan: Sculpture Activities and Lessons for Children and Kids: KinderArt (3)

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Coil Containers Pottery Lesson Plan: Sculpture Activities and Lessons for Children and Kids: KinderArt (2024)

FAQs

What is the coil method of pottery? ›

Coil pottery is a method of handbuilding pottery where a potter forms a base, walls, and style by combining clay coils (or cylinders). The potter rolls the clay into coils, stacks the coils together, and joins the coils through pressure creating a vessel.

What materials are used when making items using the coiling method? ›

Because of their intrinsic decorative value—and not because the medium dictates it—these shapes and motifs have been reproduced in such materials as wood, metal, and clay.

How are coils used to create a clay structure? ›

Rolling Coils

To roll a coil, start by shaping a lump of clay into a rough snake. Then roll the clay, starting with your hands together and moving them out toward the edges. Spread your fingers out to create even pressure along the whole coil. It's best to get some momentum while rolling to prevent flat sides.

What is the coil technique in modeling? ›

Coiling involves the rolling out of clay into a long thin sausage-like form that is wound round like a spring. Building a vessel with coils is accomplished by placing them around the circumference and gradually increasing the height.

What is an example of coiling? ›

Meaning of coiling in English

to arrange something in a coil: She coiled her hair into a neat bun on top of her head. The snake coiled itself tightly around the deer. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Bending, twisting and curving.

What are the advantages of coiling pottery? ›

The technique permits control of the walls as they are built up and allows building on top of the walls to make the vessel look bigger and bulge outward or narrow inward with less danger of collapsing. To do this, the potter takes a clay body then rolls it until it forms a coil, or long pliable cylinder.

What material is used for coils? ›

Copper is widely used for coil fabrication since it is readily available and less expensive than silver.

What materials are used in coil and stitch technique? ›

Coil Stitching.

To create the coil, flexible sticks, such as grasses, are bundled together and then wrapped with stitching. Using a needle, another grass type material, wool, or cotton is threaded around the bundle and through the previous coil to keep it in place.

What are the basics of coil? ›

Coil Winding: Basics and Machinery

An electric coil is an electrical conductor with a series of conductive wires wrapped around a core. Found in electric generators, motors, electromagnets, and inductors, electric coils provide a reliable, consistent method of inductance, effectively opposing a current's flow.

What is the best clay for coiling? ›

How to do excellent Coil-Building. Choose a clay with a medium to high percentage of multi-grade grog ( grit in different sizes from dust to medium sized bits). Scarva ES 50 Crank is ideal. Clays of this type will give you the best results.

What is the coil method of learning? ›

Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL), a type of virtual exchange or telecollaboration, is a learning process where faculty members in any discipline use online technology to facilitate sustained student collaboration to increase intercultural competence.

What is coil in ceramics? ›

The process involves taking a small amount of clay, and then rolling it out on a flat surface until it forms a rope-like shape, called a coil. The coils are used as a way of building the 'walls' of the piece by being placed on top of each other, one layer at a time.

What is coil teaching? ›

Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) is an approach that brings students and professors together across cultures to learn, discuss and collaborate as part of their class. Professors partner to design the experience, and students partner to complete the activities designed.

What is another name for the coiling method? ›

The Coiling Technique (in Italy known as colombino or lucignolo) is one of the oldest method to create objects with clay.

What is the coil binding method? ›

Also known as spiral binding, coil binding is a method where a continuous spiral of durable plastic or metal coil is threaded through evenly spaced holes along the edge of your document. It provides a beautiful aesthetic appeal and is adaptable and easy to use across various sectors.

How does a ceramic coil work? ›

Ceramic coils operate by leveraging the porous structure of ceramic material to absorb and vaporize oils and distillates. This design choice eliminates the need for a traditional wick, enhances flavor production, and promotes a more controlled heating process.

What is the difference between the coil and the slab technique in clay sculpting? ›

Coil building is a forming method that uses ropelike coils of plastic clay, assembled in successive courses to build up wall of vessel or sculpture. The slab technique starts with smooth slabs of clay that are then formed around molds or shaped by hand.

References

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