This is a wheel thrown, altered, faceted and off-white glazed red clay baking dish. Lina Pardo has branded it with her name logo.
Basic, undervalued and abundant, clay is transformed into meaningful, sculptural works and functional homeware by Lina Pardo’s hands. Her deep search for symbolism originated in her youth, in a big family where curiosity and freedom for exploration were encouraged. During an introspective gap year in Paris as a newly graduated anthropologist, Lina realised that clay was her real calling. It had been at the heart of her family all along, starting with her grandparents' brick business and her father’s work on ceramic pipelines. Today, Lina lives in her childhood home, in the foothills of Bogotá’s mountains, where clay is abundant. She draws much of her inspiration from the collective memory of her roots, ever-present in her work.
Read the full interviewPhoto: ©Lina Pardo
This is a wheel thrown, altered, faceted and off-white glazed red clay baking dish. Lina Pardo has branded it with her name logo.
Photo: ©Lina Pardo
This wheel thrown, red clay, dark engobe, and off-white glazed dish is one of Lina’s tableware art pieces branded with her name logo.
Photo: ©Lina Pardo
This wonky and textured Tiny Chair Sculpture in red clay has an off-white glaze finish.
Photo: ©Lina Pardo
Lina Pardo’s bowls are favourites among her homeware production. This one is made of wheel thrown red clay and has an off-white glaze on the inside and a raw chamotted clay finish on the outside.
Photo: ©Lina Pardo
Lina Pardo’s rustic small square dishes, slab built in red clay and engobe cross are off-white glazed on the inside and raw chamotted on the outside to an elegant finish.