Annette Lindenberg 'Pooled raindrops' sake cup 13

Annette Lindenberg 'Pooled raindrops' sake cup 13

Maker: Annette Lindenberg

Regular price £410.00

Handmade in UK.

Dimensions: W 7.5cm x H 6.5cm

Materials: Mid grey clay and glaze

Method: Hand Sculpted, Kurinuki (the Japanese technique of hollowing solid clay)

Care: Functional, wipe dry after use

 

Description: 

The beautiful tea bowl is finely handcrafted by artist Annette Lindenberg using kurinuki, the traditional Japanese technique of carving from a single block of clay. The tea bowl made of grey clay is glazed in Lindenberg’s pale blue glaze, playfully applied to show variation in the colour tone of the glaze and capturing the fluidity of glaze before firing. More evenly applied glaze on the smooth interior of the bowl shows a faint hint of a warm lilac hue, giving it an almost luminescent quality. White specks visible through the thinly applied tinted glaze hint at the sandy texture of the body, protruding along the edges of the facets. The complex texture juxtaposes with the simple, finely sculpted asymmetrical form of the cup — the rounded belly and narrower base resembles an endearing and graceful tulip shape, comfortably curving into the palm.

The piece elegantly treads a balance between delicate softness and jagged roughness, reflecting the artist’s interest in natural geomorphic forms and influence from the Japanese aesthetic theory of wabi-sabi – an appreciation for beauty in imperfection. This combination results in a mesmerising rawness and warmth that is simultaneously intimate and subliminal. The unglazed bottom exhibits the original rough clay body, finished with the neat maker’s mark.

 

About the Artist:

Annette Lindenberg is a German/British ceramicist, originally from Austria, whose work focuses on Kurinuki, the Japanese method of hollowing and carving blocks of clay. Prior to her MA, Annette graduated from Cardiff Metropolitan University with a BA in Artist: Designer Maker. She has exhibited at the British Art Fair at Saatchi and the London Art Fair with the gallery Modern Clay.

Over her time at the Royal College of Art she has explored artistic glazing, experimenting with new formulations, unusual application techniques and methods of firing. Her range of tea bowls and cups explore her personal connection to the sea, an interest in geology and clay carving method.