Fem is a series modelled on the lathe and deformed by hand to make beautiful flower-like containers. They were made with refractory clay, coloured with pigments, and fired at 1170°C for a matte finish.
María Cano Casas’ was born into a strong family heritage of philosophers, educators, and journalists. She nourishes and evolves her craft through exploration and cultural exchange. Her contact with native communities in Colombia has been a calling to record and preserve ancient ceramic techniques and to seek knowledge exchange opportunities both locally and abroad. María has a bachelor’s degree in Arts and Crafts from Los Andes University, Bogotá and an MA in Production Design for Film and Television at Kingston University, London. She opened Salvaje in 2016 with her first restaurant commission to design a tableware series. Today, she creates unique decorative and sculptural pieces as well as utilitarian and custom tableware for a select clientele, redefining the ancestral techniques she wholeheartedly wants to preserve.
Read the full interviewPhoto: ©Maria Cano
Fem is a series modelled on the lathe and deformed by hand to make beautiful flower-like containers. They were made with refractory clay, coloured with pigments, and fired at 1170°C for a matte finish.
Photo: ©Cristina de la Concha
Here is a selection from María Cano’s Archipiélago collection of refractory bowls, hand modelled with very singular and organic rims. They were glazed at high temperatures in aqua, blue and coral colours to morph like reefs.
Photo: ©Maria Cano
Geografías del Contacto is a series of uncooked spheres made with wild Colombian clays. They have been modelled by hand using the Rollo Tinajero technique from the community of Juana Sánchez, Bolívar, which consists in rolling the clay to construct the piece from an originally coiled form.