Homo Faber

PRESS EN Languages Account Follow us Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter
|
Presented by logo Homo Faber by Michelangelo Foundation
Explore Artisans Museums & Galleries Experience Itineraries About
© Courtesy of the artist
© Courtesy of the artist
© Sylvain Deleu
© Courtesy of the artist
© Dominic Tschudin

Katie Spragg

  • Ceramicist
  • Brighton, United Kingdom
  • Master Artisan
Katie Spragg Ceramicist
© Sylvain Deleu

Sharing a passion

  • • Katie loves teaching ceramics
  • • She enjoys working with and engaging with others
  • • She is inspired by our interconnection with nature

Working predominantly in ceramics, Katie Spragg creates artworks that peer into our interconnected relationship with nature, questioning the evolving patterns in which humans and plants co-exist. She is interested in the tension and space between managed and cultivated landscapes and the tenacious resourcefulness of nature, pulling focus to the margins and intersections. Her work encourages deeper investigation into how plants behave and how their behaviour can help us reconsider our own approach to communities and landscape. Katie often creates work in response to the participation of other people, this has included Lambeth Young Carers and Clay for Dementia groups at the Garden Museum for Arts Council, a project funded by Lambeth Wilds, and working with young refugees in Norwich on a collaborative project and exhibition with Caroline Fisher and Norwich International Youth Group.

Read the full interview

Works

  • © Sylvain Deleu
  • © Sylvain Deleu
  • © Courtesy of the artist
  • © Sylvain Deleu
  • © Dave Watts
Photo: © Sylvain Deleu
Nunhead to Bermondsey Turf

Part of the London Wilds series, which celebrates London's urban nature. This work was conceived and produced in Katie's studio over six months. While these sculptures appear as elegant renderings of nature, for her they each connect to a contemporary issue or story; female only spaces, the demolition of London's historical buildings and people’s communal and private green spaces.

Length 12 cm
Width 11 cm
Height 13 cm

Photo: © Sylvain Deleu
Loch Ken Turf

One of the first in an ongoing series of ‘Turf’ pieces – small clumps of land that explore how even a small section of plant life can evoke a sense of a place.

Length 12 cm
Width 12 cm
Height 20 cm

Photo: © Courtesy of the artist
Fern

This collection presents natural objects found and collected while Katie Spragg was walking in the Scottish landscape exploring the theme of wildness. She recreated them in clay, and mounted them to echo the postcards the original objects were gathered on.

Length 15 cm
Width 10 cm
Height 3 cm

Photo: © Sylvain Deleu
Haggerston Skate Park Clover

Part of the London Wilds series, which celebrates London's urban nature. This work was conceived and produced in Katie Spragg's studio over six months. While these sculptures appear as elegant renderings of nature, for her they each connect to a contemporary issue or story; female only spaces, the demolition of London's historical buildings and people’s communal and private green spaces.

Length 10 cm
Width 10 cm
Height 22 cm

Photo: © Dave Watts
Horsetail, Bindweed, Nettles

Part of a collection of works in response to the Piet Oudolf garden at Hauser & Wirth, Somerset, UK and the surrounding landscape. Katie created ten new works as a response to nature, time and place. A theme that threads through this work is interactions: between plants of the same and different species, interactions between cultivated spaces of nature and naturally occurring wild plants and interactions between humans and plants.

Length 18 cm
Width 15 cm
Height 35 cm

You may also like

Download the app

Find all the Homo Faber Guide content at hand, save, like and much more!