Chloé Rosetta Bell Brass Footed and Lidded Pot 20
Maker: Chloé Rosetta Bell
Regular price
$473.00
Handmade in UK
Dimensions: H 11cm x Ø 19cm
Materials: A blend of stoneware and locally sourced wild clay, with a wild sand slip and seaweed glaze. The wild sand slip is formed of landfall on the Undercliff and the seaweed ash glaze is made using seaweed from the bay below Chloé's studio. Finished with brass which is wrapped in seaweed.
Method: Hand-thrown and Hand-forged
Care: This piece can hold water. Handle with care, avoid harsh chemicals, protect against extreme temperatures, and periodically inspect for any signs of wear or damage.
Description
Chloé's stoneware and wild clay works entice viewers to immerse themselves in the fluidity of water. In her wide, curvaceous pot, graced with brass feet and a lidded top, one can feel water's ceaseless transformation.
Sourced meticulously from her home on the Isle of Wight, Chloé artfully blends wild clay and seaweed, the very essence of her coastal surroundings. The wild sand slip is formed of landfall on the Undercliff. The piece is then adorned by a seaweed ash glaze, made using locally sourced seaweed. Also embellished in seaweed, the brass lid and foot take on an enigmatic allure, a symbol of the perpetual interplay between the land and water. Speckles and drips of green-brown within the body tell a story of time's passage and nature's rugged essence.
In this piece, Chloé's artistry transcends the ordinary, encapsulating one of water's many essences—the power to sculpt and the capacity to nurture. It serves as a reminder of the harmonious rhythm that sustains life, and an invitation to ponder the interconnectedness of our world.
About the Artist
Chloé Rosetta Bell is a ceramicist who graduated from the Royal College of Art in 2019. Material-focused and primarily working in clay, her work is driven by her relationship with the land surrounding her home on the Isle of Wight. Situated in the Undercliff, it is one of the largest areas of urban landslip in Europe. Her practice seeks to create a tangible, physical celebration of this windswept landscape, and the livelihoods dependent on a specific landscape in general.
Chloé’s work is research-based. She will study materials, narratives and stories within a specific landscape to inform her collections. In one instance, she developed unique glazes from oyster shells at Porthilly Oyster Farm and chalk residue produced from washing Halen Môn’s sea salt. This method of research-based practice speaks to both how she creates and what she is saying with her work. Rosetta Bell creates an object that is at once beautiful in form, shape and texture. But, what is just as intriguing is how she does this whilst creating a physical and sensory piece of record of her landscape; a collision point between man and nature. Her work preserves her natural surroundings and the human livelihoods that depend upon it.