DORA DE LARIOS CAPTURES SLICE OF COASTLINE
WITH MASSIVE PORCELAIN WALL SCULPTURE
Artist labored for 15 months creating tile mural
for Laguna Beach's new Montage Resort & Spa
Installation begins this week at Laguna Beach's new Montage Resort
& Spa on a massive porcelain wall sculpture by Los Angeles artist
Dora De Larios. The piece represents a slice of marine life
with halibut, turtles, barracudas, crabs, imaginary fish, underwater
plants, clouds, birds, and the strata of the ocean floor.
The porcelain mural features De Larios' trademark turquoise glazes
on background tiles covered with layers of fish and plant life.
The textured porcelain and varying shades of turquoise reflect the
play of light upon the ocean.
For De Larios, the work began 15 months ago with hundreds of tests
to
perfect the unique shades of turquoise glaze. Achieving the
colors she imagined in a formula that would hold up to high heat required
just the right combination of minerals.
"Porcelain is high-fired at 2385°F," De Larios explains.
"At that temperature, glazes tend to become unstable and run, so you
have to keep adding different minerals to achieve the right color
and stability." Each piece of the mural was glazed four times
with two different glazes.
Complicated glaze formulas like De Larios' turquoise are highly coveted
and
protected by ceramic artists. Potters have sold their rare glaze
recipes for millions of dollars.
Once the glazes were perfected, De Larios began the arduous task
of creating
plaster molds for the fish. That process took 2-1/2 months.
Along with referencing real marine life, De Larios gave herself license
to create the kind of whimsical imaginary creatures for which she
is known.
Working in porcelain proved particularly challenging given the size
of the sculpture, the artist admits. "I chose it because I wanted
to make the most beautiful mural possible. But there are high
losses with porcelain. Because it has a finer grain, it's a very unforgiving
material." De Larios said if she added all the days together that
she and five assistants spent firing the kiln, it would equal 4-1/2
months. Add that to the 3-1/2 tons of clay required to complete
the piece, and the enormity of the project falls into perspective.
The end result is a ceramic mural of incomparable beauty that reflects
and
re-interprets the California coastal waters. As a native of
the state, De Larios finds gratitude in knowing that she has taken
clay from the earth and transformed it into a gift that generations
will enjoy.
De Larios credits noted Laguna Beach firm Daniel Fine Art Services
for her
participation in the project. Evalyn Daniel, principal of the
firm, has represented De Larios' work for the past 18 years and has
been responsible for many of her large-scale commissions.