Saturday, June 7, 2025

Day 4668: Ancient Artifacts as Edible Replicas & A Ninja History Essay.

"Non-stop": junk paper collage & Acrylic.

   




  

Want music?


    

Click: Ray Charles, Hit the Road, Jack. 


 


2GN2S

 Ancient Artifacts as Edible Replicas

 by Dr. Ella Hawkins

William Morris Biscuit Set. All images courtesy of Ella Hawkins,


Academic research is notoriously niche and often opaque, but 
Dr. Ella Hawkins has found a crowd-pleasing way to share her studies. The Birmingham-based artist and design historian translates her interests in Shakespeare performance, costume, and material culture into edible replicas.

Ancient Greek Pottery Sherds

Hawkins bakes batches of cookies that she tops with royal icing. Decorating takes a scholarly turn, as she uses tiny paintbrushes and a mini projector to help trace imagery of William Morris’ ornate floral motifs or coastal scenes from English delftware. Rendering a design on a single cookie can take anywhere between two and four hours, depending on the complexity. Unsurprisingly, minuscule calligraphy and portraits are most demanding.

Delftware Tiles

Hawkins first merged baking and her research about a decade ago while studying undergraduate costume design at the University of Warwick. She decided to bake cupcakes based on Shakespeare productions that her class examined. “It felt like a fun way to look back at all the different design styles we’d covered through the year,” she tells Colossal, adding:

I carried on decorating cakes and cookies based on costume design through my PhD (mainly as goodies to give out during talks, or as gifts for designers that I interviewed), then branched out and spent lots of time doing cookie versions of other artefacts to keep busy during the pandemic.

Medieval Tiles, inspired by The Tristram Tiles, Chertsey, Surrey, England (c. 1260s-70s)

Hawkins ventures farther back in history to ancient Greece with a collection of pottery sherds inspired by objects within the Ashmolean Museum. With a bowed surface to mimic a vessel’s curvature, the irregular shapes feature fragments of various motifs and figures to which she applied a sgraffito technique, a Renaissance method of scratching a surface to reveal the layer below.

Milton’s Cottage Biscuit Set developed in collaboration with Milton’s Cottage

The weathered appearance is the result of blotting a base of pale brown-grey before using a scribe tool to scratch and crack the royal icing coating the surface. She then lined these etchings with a mix of vodka and black food coloring to mimic dirt and wear. (It’s worth taking a look at this process video.)

Outlander Biscuit Set

Other than a select few preserved for talks and events, Hawkins assures us that the rest of her cookies are eaten. Find more of her work on her website and Instagram. Great video, here.

Elizabethan Gauntlet Biscuit Set












 

  
 
A 5+ minute video, nuit blanche,  here
 

 
 

  
 
Just because ...

   
Indian Grey Hornbill



 

Saturday's Smiles ... 




   














  
  

 

No comments: