When I came across the potter wasps and became aware of these clay nests, their habitat, I thought that it would be interesting to fire them. But I only took these nests away from their environment after the potter wasps had grown up and abandoned them. Only then did I put them in the kiln, firing them at a thousand degrees, as is customary with ceramics.
The first time that I fired these nests, I was worried that they would break. Fortunately, however, these structures have been expertly put together, without a single air bubble between one clay coil and the other, which prevents them from exploding in the kiln. I fired these nests to preserve them and make them less fragile
The last clay nests that I found were clinging to the inner lining of a winter jacket that I had left in the cellar.
Jorge Hernandez, Le vespe vasaie di Albisola. Terracotta. Photo: Fulvio Rosso. Courtesy Istituto Ligustico di Patafisica Contemporanea
I used to live in Albisola Superiore, near the River Sansobbia, where the wasps still go to harvest the clay from the river bank, in the very same clay pits where ceramists once went to find theirs. We share the use of this type of clay for construction with this type of wasp.
The potter wasp doesn’t mix the clay just with its saliva, because it would need an enormous quantity of saliva. The wasp chooses the clay, selecting a type that already has a very high degree of moisture, makes a ball using its legs, and then transports it to the nest site. It then begins to build nests adopting a modular shape. The shape formed is dictated by the possibilities of the material, as well as the particular places in which they are building the nest, and the shape is therefore pared down to its essentials. In addition, this modular shape is perfectly adapted for the larvae for whom the nests are made – these modules almost seem to be moulds for them. In any case, they are modular, and the potter wasps frequently create modular structures, comparable to our terraced houses.
Jorge Hernandez, Le vespe vasaie di Albisola. Terracotta. Photo: Fulvio Rosso. Courtesy Istituto Ligustico di Patafisica Contemporanea
I was trying to think like a potter wasp: I am born and driven by the need to find the raw material to build new nests. That is my mission: to pass survival skills on to the next generation.
In this case, like other artists, I feel like a collector. I liked the idea of preserving these nests knowing that they were built by the wasps. Collecting is a way of ordering and taking care of things that we love. The nests made a big impression on me and so I created a systematic and exclusive collection consisting only of nests.
Jorge Hernandez,Le vespe vasaie di Albisola. Terracotta. Photo: Fulvio Rosso. Courtesy Istituto Ligustico di Patafisica Contemporanea
I take the nests and use them just as they are. Another reason I wanted to fire the nests was so that others could find out about them too. The potter wasp forces us to reconsider our place in the world, view ourselves in a more realistic perspective, which is very healthy. I don’t think that the wasps have learned from us: it is far more likely that we humans have taken their architecture as an example. The potter wasps have helped me to better understand the different types of local clay. I have also found nests made with two or three different types of clay; amongst these I recognised a white clay which I had already worked on and which they decided to take advantage of and use. In other words, the potter wasps test the clay and choose the one with just the right amount of moisture for their needs.
Roberto Costantino, President of the Istituto Ligustico di Patafisica Contemporanea, is an art critic, curator and journalist