Cinders (MFA Exhibition)





The title of my MFA exhibition, Cinders, serves as a layered metaphor. On one level, it represents the ceramic pieces in the exhibition, which, like cinders, are substances that have endured extreme heat, and thereby transformed by it. The title also reflects my conceptual aim: to draw a parallel between these ceramics and contemporary subjects. Much like fired clay, we are metaphorical cinders, shaped by the intense pressures and challenges of contemporary life.

My metaphorical stance on the word invites a further structural reflection on "cinder" as a concept—what conditions give rise to its formation, and what does it truly signify for something to become "cinder"?  

Examining the concept of cinders as a metaphor for the ceramics process – the process of firing clay in a kiln – reveals its intrinsic connection to temporality. To be more precise, it reveals a temporal in-between-ness. Rather than implying a linear progression of "before" and "after," cinders encapsulate a state of transition—an in-between phase where the flame still burns, or the substance has not yet been fully consumed.