The small base of this dark stoneware bowl creates balance by adding a hint of lightness to the heft of the solid stoneware. The bowl was hand thrown on a potter’s wheel and fired in an electric kiln.
Height 13 cm
Diameter 14 cm
Ivana Petan became interested in ceramics more than 20 years ago. She learned from a master of ceramics for two years, and despite her formal education in social pedagogy, she decided to dedicate herself to clay. Once she had mastered certain techniques, she bought a pottery wheel and a kiln. But technique isn’t everything; she feels it’s important to work with your imagination. According to Ivana, only when you get to know the qualities of the material and respect it, can you create something. For her, clay is a living medium through which she gets to know herself; when she teaches her students, she gets to know them, too. Her master’s degree in philosophy of visual culture and her interest in nature inspired her career path.
Read the full interviewPhoto: © Bojan Brecelj
The small base of this dark stoneware bowl creates balance by adding a hint of lightness to the heft of the solid stoneware. The bowl was hand thrown on a potter’s wheel and fired in an electric kiln.
Height 13 cm
Diameter 14 cm
Photo: © Bojan Brecelj
This oval, turquoise, stoneware bowl fits in the palm of a hand, making it very pleasant and natural to hold. It was shaped on a potter’s wheel, hand altered and glazed with turquoise glaze and sprayed with iron oxide.
Height 9 cm
Diameter 15 cm
Photo: © Bojan Brecelj
This v-form stoneware bowl with a small base was shaped on a potter’s wheel and glazed only on the inside. The combination of slip and glaze inside the bowl creates a texture resembling the skin of a red snake with a gold shine. In contrast, the matt, speckled, light surface of the unglazed, rough, stoneware exterior gives a tactile experience.
Height 4.7 cm
Diameter 17 cm
Photo: © Bojan Brecelj
This stoneware plate was created by rolling and repeatedly overlapping stoneware coils while adding porcelain and different kinds of stoneware in various colours. With no defined outcome, the process resulted in unique images and textures. The idea was that its soil-like surface would provoke the desire to eat.
Height 1 cm
Diameter 19 cm
Photo: © Bojan Brecelj
The form of these asymmetrical stoneware cups was achieved by rubbing white stoneware powder into the wet, dark brown stoneware surface. The result is a cracked, earthy, rough surface.
Height 8 cm
Diameter 8 cm