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Candy
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£469.00
£469.00
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Information about this artwork
This ceramic sculpture was made from singular cones that were thrown on the potters wheel then cut up and joined together to create a whole form.
Medium: Stoneware, vitreous slips, clear glaze, multiple fired to a final temperature of 1220c.
Created: 24/3/2020
Sculpture Dimensions: H20 W21 D12
- Ready to be displayed indoors only.
- Original handmade free standing sculpture, includes a Certificate of Authenticity.
- Ships in a securely packed cardboard box "box within a box" protected by bubble wrap and loose fill.
- 7 day return period if your not happy with your order.
- Payment Plan Available. Click here to learn more.
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Inspiration
This ceramic sculpture investigates ways of seeing inside and outside space using colour, line and pattern. The intention is to draw and scatter the eye to investigate different parts of the form simultaneously.
The inspiration behind this work stems from Stonehenge in Salisbury, England.
It leads me to think about ideas around construction, geometrics, mystery, imagination, introspection, belief and ways of seeing. It is these ideas that helped to create this ceramic sculpture.
Overhaul, it is up to the viewer to decide how and what they experience from it. Just like observing Stonehenge, it is there to bring your own imagination to it.
This ceramic sculpture was created using cones thrown on the potter’s wheel which was then cut up and joined together to create the form. Traditional the potter’s wheel is seen as a tool to create pottery. However, I shift the usage of the potter’s wheel to be used to create sculpture.
This ceramic sculpture investigates ways of seeing inside and outside space using colour, line and pattern. The intention is to draw and scatter the eye to investigate different parts of the form simultaneously.
The inspiration behind this work stems from Stonehenge in Salisbury, England.
It leads me to think about ideas around construction, geometrics, mystery, imagination, introspection, belief and ways of seeing. It is these ideas that helped to create this ceramic sculpture.
Overhaul, it is up to the viewer to decide how and what they experience from it. Just like observing Stonehenge, it is there to bring your own imagination to it.
This ceramic sculpture was created using cones thrown on the potter’s wheel which was then cut up and joined together to create the form. Traditional the potter’s wheel is seen as a tool to create pottery. However, I shift the usage of the potter’s wheel to be used to create sculpture.