In Chelsea’s workshop today, we explored the magic of salt dough. It brought back memories of the time before I was in school, when I was home with my mom during the days before she re-entered the workforce. We would sometimes make play dough and it was great. I remember the smell of it especially. We never baked it but we did sometimes leave it out to dry. At first this morning I wasn’t sure what I wanted to make with my salt dough. I didn’t really want to sculpt it. It had a weird consistency at first, not weird for dough but weird for sculpting. It doesn’t seem to hold sharp forms, it is always a little soft. I decided to try to print something to make and impression, and I thought of the cyanotype book I made. So I decided to try printing my face for fun and to see what it would look like. I rolled the dough out into a strip using my hands, and then after trying a few times to press my face into it I settled on the idea of pressing my ear in first and then kind of rolling forward to get my eye and nose. So the print ended up being a distorted impression of a face. I think the most successful part is the ear–it’s king of a negative sort of along the lines of Rachael Whiteread or Marcel Duchamp.
The process of making the Dough is very simple, with only three ingredients: 2x Flour mixed with water and salt. It mixed to a usable consistency quickly.
I enjoyed this project, it was relaxing. I think it is best suited for very young kids who can’t really use clay yet. After seeing what Brianna made with the coral though, I think it could be used in High School. It might be interesting to use the dough to make a mold for impressions and then to pour plaster to get a positive. It could make some interesting relief sculptures and introduce the idea of mold making.
Fantastic job Damian! Your face smear/imprint was such a bold and ingenious use of the material. I’m glad to see you didn’t get any dough stuck your ear! I’m happy you gave salt dough a chance and even found it relaxing.