Inspiration

in the shade

March 18, 2022

This lamp, designed by emerging talent, Oscar Piccolo is so beautiful I want to carry it around like a little parasol. Affectionately called the, ‘lampada cappello’, –– cappello means hat in Italian –– the pleated lampshade sits on a squiggly base that makes it easy to twist around. Inspired by vintage hats Piccolo found at a local charity shop, the lamp is available in a range of chic colours. “I wanted to make a subtle lamp that’s not too imposing,” Piccolo says. “One that’s beautiful, even when it’s off.” Have a look at Piccolo’s London flat; white washed walls and a minimal aesthetic are an ideal canvas for this designer’s creative mind.

around and around

March 18, 2022

Dancing bedouins by Inge Morath.

Claudia Rankin’s happy-making pottery.

Culinary photographer, Franck Hamel.

The flower that walks by Fernand Léger.

Yoshishige Saito‘s blue.

material matters

March 16, 2022

Yutaka Yoshinaga‘s artworks have the look of paint peeling from a wall. Drawn on traditional Japanese washi paper using dry pigments, colour and texture are both central to his work. The pieces are like unfolded origami. “The life of materials,” every crease, blemish and repair, is what intrigues him. I find them very beautiful, but it’s his meditative pace –– Yoshinaga works on one square at a time –– and his respect for what happens to his materials over time, that I find inspiring.

flat pack

March 15, 2022

I’m always inspired by artists who stretch the boundaries of traditional ceramics. Willem van Hooff‘s playful vessels are flat versions of traditional three dimensional shapes. They’re about 10 cm thick and made from joining two thick slabs of clay together. “Willem prioritizes experimentation, freedom and fun in his approach: often shaping works by hand and deliberately distorting their proportions, adding a personal touch that he finds lacking in the era of mass-production and consumerism.” His Core series is inspired by prehistoric African building techniques. Each vessel is functional –– as was always the case with traditional African pottery –– with a secret chamber in which to carry water. I find the work fabulously original, and that it’s functional, adds to its appeal.

interior

March 14, 2022

What I like about this interior are all its many contrasts, like the laissezfaire linens and heavy mahogany frames. I love the traditionally carved, smooth headboard against the roughness of an unfinished brick wall. Even the anemones look lazy and wild on that heavy slab of stone. The mother of pearl chandelier, light and iridescent, hangs over a dark honey floor. I like interior design that captures the essence of what it is to be human; light and dark, playful and serious, tidy and imperfect.

around and around

March 13, 2022

Beautiful gelatin silver prints by Ion Zupcu.

White houses are the loveliest houses.

Henry Holland’s highly patterned plates.

Agostino iacurci’s mural.

A stone sink.

Hilary Pecis’ Ranunculuses.

hyacinths

March 11, 2022

I just bought five bunches of Hyacinths from my local corner shop that within minutes of entering the house muffled the smell of gym socks and meatloaf with their ethereal scent. On this very day last year, I wrote about the simple pleasure that I get from buying Hyacinths in late Winter, how their thick, green stalks and frilly petals are an antipode to the season’s withered stems and spiky seed heads. The Hyacinths, like the birds, buds and later sunsets, are all signs that Spring is taking her first breaths. Let’s try and breath with her.

clay in the life

March 10, 2022

My Mum is as enthusiastic about ceramics as I am, and most of our conversations now circle back to clay. Throughout lock-down, we both pinched pots at our respective kitchen tables –– hers in a small London flat, mine in a Toronto Victorian –– while nattering about vaccines, Brexit, botox and how best to poach an egg. For both of us, clay provided an escape, respite and release. For Christmas 2021 my Mum sent me a small ceramic sculpture she had made at her kitchen table. I hadn’t seen her in such a long time and I was so grateful to hold something in my hands that she had made with hers. These delicate works by French ceramicist, Jeanne-Sarah Bellaiche reminded me of the piece my Mum sent to me. They’re beautiful, aren’t they?

gravity

March 8, 2022

That Kristina Riska works on the scale that she does –– her work is massive –– and produces such diaphanous vessels is a testament to extraordinary skill. Critics say her work, “defies gravity” and stretches the boundaries of ceramic sculpture. This footage of the artist at work in her Helsinki studio is quite lovely, and gives us some sense of her process. As beautiful as her curvaceous forms, are her matte, earthy glazes that look like mud, rock, bone and charcoal.

fine line

March 7, 2022

It rained and hailed and snowed today, and the weather reminded me of Helen Booth’s paintings. The British artist works with a monochromatic palette, and paints in small strokes and dots of colour. I see snow squalls and raindrops on glass when I look at her paintings. She captures the magic and stillness of a fresh snowfall so beautifully. I can only imagine how meditative it would be to sit in a room of her paintings.

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