The Ammonite Project is an experimental artwork with the intention of making people smile! It comprises of ceramic ammonite-themed pieces, ranging from approximately 9cm across down to 2cm across. In June 2024 they were placed on Charmouth and Lyme Regis beaches (famous for fossils - especially ammonites) for other people to find - and hopefully to get in contact and let us know they found them. Each "ammonite" is stamped with an ID number and some contact information. The project is participatory as it requires interaction from other people to tell us they found them, in order for the art installation to work. This page documents the making of the pieces and the results.
No. 2 and 18 already found, with some lovely comments sent!
Found one? Tell us all about it!
I'm sat in the Oxfordshire Arts pottery studio, idly making some ammonites, thinking I will add them as mini-tiles to a beach themed splashback I am doing. "Why don't you paint that gold?" I hear in background conversation elsewhere in the studio. Bingo. That sets me thinking about fool's gold ammonites, very commonly found on Charmouth and Lyme Regis beaches - a place I have been many, many times. That led me to think about whether I could get the pottery glaze colour to emulate a fool's gold ammonite. Which then made me think about hiding them on the beach - thats how it started. Charmouth and Lyme Regis are well known fossil hunting hotspots and is where Mary Anning, the now famous paleontologist and fossil hunter, lived.
Many people visit Charmouth and Lyme Regis in the hope of finding a fossil or two. Some are lucky, some are not - and I thought it would be nice to add some bigger "ammonites" which might be easier to spot. The intent is to make people smile when they find them - the question will be: will they keep them, or hide them again for someone else? And will they even let me know they found one? I'd certainly be excited if I had found something like this!
The ammonites are made from clay; the pictures above and to the left show some examples of the unfired and bisque fired ammonites. A variety of glazes and underglaze colours are applied before refiring - these show what the glazes looked like before firing, and also how they came out after firing. The information written on the back of the ammonites was achieved by carefully imprinting the letters - one at a time - using small stamps. Some colouring (underglaze) was added to the letters to make them more readable.
The ammonites were hidden on the beach and surrounds in June 2024. They were all above the tide line (where possible) and not too well hidden - after all, the intent is for people to find them and to make them smile! Some pictures of the hidden ammonites are shown in the Ammonite Gallery section below - and if anyone tells me they found them, I will add some updates! Happy hunting!
If you fancy a spot of fossil hunting at Charmouth or Lyme Regis - for these ammonites or the real ones - please follow Charmouth and Lyme Regis' local Fossil Collecting Code, and collect safely and considerately.
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