Egyptian Teapot Commission for Kamm Teapot Foundation (2010-12)
In January 2012, I completed my second commission for the respected Kamm Teapot Foundation Collection. (See also Water and Fish (Series: Water Ways).) This project is the largest, in terms of beaded surface area, that I yet have attempted. Although not truly usable to serve tea, the Egyptian Teapot was required to have all the elements of a teapot: a handle, a spout, a lid, etc. As is true of many of my sculptures, the work was a collaborative one. I was responsible for the design and completion of all of the beadwork, and the bulk of the woodworking was executed by my husband, Lindsay Grigsby. In the case of this sculpture, special assistance with the face carving was provided by local Pennsylvania craftsman, Fred Hoover.
The work when it was in progress:
1) Wood carving and initial construction. The partially constructed front shows penciled details. Lindsay begins to refine the overall teapot carcass shape (about 16 1/2″ in height).
2) The teapot is disassembled to facilitate design layout and painting of the face. The face is selectively pierced, for beading.
3) As Lindsay refines other aspects of the shape, I finally can begin beading. Below, the face and eyes are beaded in peyote stitch; the headdress sides are in square stitch, facilitating clean-edged horizontal rows.
4) Below, is the front half of the pot with the necklace shown in ladder stitch, with bugle and seed beads. The white “dress” and forehead of the headdress are peyote-stitched in seed beads. The separate elements–shoulders, headdress sides, and head–are laid upon one another, but not quite ready for attachment, and the edges remain unfinished. The hole for the cobra-spout is centered on the forehead.
5) The below display the next phases of the project, reflecting many months of beading and some pretty tricky assembly work.
6) …and at long last, the finished sculpture. (H: 17″; W: 16 3/4″; D: 13″ )





















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