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Mia Sarosi

Mia Sarosi Porcelain maker
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Seduced by porcelain

  • • Mia's porcelain is sought by top UK cultural bodies
  • • She is known for her hand-thrown pots and her blue and white brushwork
  • • Fortnum and Mason gave Mia her big break

Mia Sarosi began working with ceramics in 1991 as an artist at an English Delftware studio but she soon craved the freedom to paint her own designs and make her own forms. She learned how to make and throw from a number of master potters before setting up her own workshop in 2001. Mia’s work draws on multiple sources of inspiration, ranging from British wildlife, botany and her travels abroad to her philosophical and cultural interests. Her bespoke work can regularly be found in the British Museum, the Courtauld and Heal’s, which praises Mia's "aesthetic, delicate silhouette work and unique handmade designs" for making her work stand out against the competition.

Read the full interview

Works

  • © Mia Sarosi
  • © Mia Sarosi
  • © Mia Sarosi
  • © Mia Sarosi
  • © Mia Sarosi
Photo: © Mia Sarosi
Landscape with Trees Vase

This elegant hand-thrown porcelain vase with a clear white glaze has been finished with detailed blue cobalt brushwork decoration. Featuring in Mia’s new 2019 collection, the piece was inspired by simple landscapes and trees that she represents with broad brushstrokes and the tonal application of cobalt washes.

Height 25 cm

Photo: © Mia Sarosi
Ostrich Egg Vases

Mia drew her inspiration for the shape of these two prize-winning porcelain hand-thrown vases from the form of ostrich eggs. She also decorated the vase with close-up images in cobalt brushwork of ostriches looking at the viewer. The exterior was finished with a clear white glaze contrasting with the dark blue of the interior. The pair of vases was exhibited at Potfest in the Pens 2019, in the Avian Architecture competition.

Height 30 cm

Photo: © Mia Sarosi
Prime Numbers Plate

This hand-thrown plate, with cobalt brushwork decoration and a clear glaze, was finished with gold lustre detail. Mathematicians have searched for a pattern in prime numbers and never found one, but Mia has managed to create one. She sometimes makes pots featuring number sequences (primes, pi, phi, Fibonacci, etc.) for special exhibitions, and has noticed that they always spark more conversations than other pieces.

Height 30 cm

Photo: © Mia Sarosi
Fireworks Large Bowls

The serendipitous designs on these hand-thrown, clear-glazed porcelain bowls evolved from experimenting with colour in the kiln. The “halos” in the oxide decorations are formed with vanadium crystals. This is an ongoing series, with the large bowls being particularly popular.

Photo: © Mia Sarosi
Mugs

Mia has around 30 ranges of designs that she paints on a variety of functional objects, some of which are shown here. These clear-glazed, hand-thrown mugs were finished with cobalt brushwork. Her themes are inspired by wildlife and domestic animals, ocean creatures, botanicals, or literary references such as the short story Blue Tigers by JL Borges, which gave rise to her blue tiger range.

Diameter 13 cm

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