These are two coil and slab built vases. The one on the left is pink and yellow, the other is blue and purple. The body is made of grogged stoneware with high fired porcelain and coloured decorating slips, and transparent glaze detailing.
Amy Jayne Hughes graduated from the School of Material, RCA in London in 2010. She is a ceramicist who digs into vase design from eras past and reinterprets aesthetics for today. Her signature approach is to emphasise the material used underneath. In her work, there is equal respect for historical designs and for clay as a material: Amy preserves historical design achievements in her innovative reimagination of them. Amy's process involves leaving fingerprints in the clay and sticking cardboard-like pieces onto vases. She consciously leaves her playing visible in the final piece, to put the clay material itself on show. By liberating the material from excessive ornamentation and glaze, Amy reclaims the space for clay and opens our eyes to the possibilities for future vase-making.
Read the full interviewPhoto: ©Cristina Schek
These are two coil and slab built vases. The one on the left is pink and yellow, the other is blue and purple. The body is made of grogged stoneware with high fired porcelain and coloured decorating slips, and transparent glaze detailing.
Photo: ©Cristina Schek
This is a coil and slab built vase, made with a grogged stoneware body, coloured decorating slips and transparent glaze detailing.
Photo: ©Cristina Schek
This is a coil and press moulded vase with extruded handle details, made of grogged grey stoneware for the body, and covered with a basalt matt glaze.
Photo: ©Cristina Schek
This is a coil and press moulded hand-built vase, made with a grogged porcelain body, press moulded detail and a matt white glaze interior.
Photo: ©Cristina Schek
This is a coil and slab built vase. It is made with grogged stoneware for the body, high fired porcelain and coloured decorating slips. The interior is glazed with a transparent glaze.