Craft Archives — Colossal https://www.thisiscolossal.com/category/craft/ The best of art, craft, and visual culture since 2010. Wed, 19 Feb 2025 15:50:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/icon-crow-150x150.png Craft Archives — Colossal https://www.thisiscolossal.com/category/craft/ 32 32 Adrienna Matzeg’s Punch Needle Embroideries Conjure Nostalgic Summer Road Trips https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/02/adrienna-matzeg-the-scenic-route/ Wed, 19 Feb 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=450590 Adrienna Matzeg’s Punch Needle Embroideries Conjure Nostalgic Summer Road Trips'The Scenic Route' evokes simple joys, brief pauses, and the fading light of day.

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No matter where the map directs you, a road trip usually conjures some key elements that make it unique from any other kind of journey. Think quirky roadside attractions, diners, spontaneous snack stops, scenic views, national parks—the list goes on!

For Adrienna Matzeg, summertime trips inspire a new series of punch needle embroidery works (previously) in a collection titled The Scenic Route, now available through Tacit Collective.

“Lick-A-Treat”

The Toronto-based artist merges her interests in photography, textiles, and design to create vibrant, narrative embroidery compositions. “Through reducing the subject matter in her work to simplified colours, shapes, and fragments, she explores how we recall memories, with a specific interest in travel destinations and souvenirs,” says a gallery statement.

In works like “Catch of the Day,” Matzeg evokes the timeless experience of a pint of brew and a gingham-lined basket of freshly battered fish. “Lighthouse Route” captures a scenic byway sign, and in “The Afterglow,” a grocery store sign advertises summer vacation staples like ice cream cones and pizza by the slice.

Pieces in The Scenic Route hint at simple joys, brief pauses, and the fading light of day, evoking “in-between” experiences that may seem ordinary enough at the moment but linger in the memory long after summer ends.

Explore more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

“Catch of the Day”
Detail of “Lick-A-Treat”
“Open”
Detail of “The Afterglow”
“Lighthouse Route”
“At the Lookoff”
Detail of “At the Lookoff”

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Lena Guberman’s Emotive Sculptures Call Upon Childhood Social Anxiety https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/02/lena-guberman-masks/ Wed, 12 Feb 2025 18:00:00 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=450239 Lena Guberman’s Emotive Sculptures Call Upon Childhood Social AnxietyGuberman considers the faces we "put on" that enable us to feel less fearful of the outside world.

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For any of us who are shy or anxious about interacting with others in the outside world, we might think of the face we “put on” that enable us to feel less fearful. For Lena Guberman (previously), a recent series of ceramic sculptures titled INS_IDE_OUT delves into her childhood experiences with social anxiety and the uncertainties of the unknown.

“The mask provides a protective shell and presents a ‘perfect’ appearance to the outside world but fails to stop the fears and emotions from bursting out,” Guberman tells Colossal.

Each piece is modeled on the same melancholy face of a young, brown-haired girl, with painted and sculpted elements that range from spikes to arrows to a dead bird. Emotionally evocative and sometimes slightly unsettling, her sculptures explore the spectrum of feelings associated with anxiety.

Guberman is currently planning a project that expands upon her use of ceramics by adding other materials. See more work on her website, Instagram, and Behance.

a ceramic mask with the face of a young girl with brown hair, with numerous arrows sticking out of her face
a ceramic mask with the face of a young girl with brown hair, with a small figure of another girl standing on the head, wearing a red-and-white striped dress
a gif of a ceramic mask with the face of a young girl with red stars and creatures painted on it
a ceramic mask with the face of a young girl with brown hair in braids that are engulfing her face
a ceramic mask with the face of a young girl with brown hair and a very long, skinny red tongue draped from her mouth
a figure holds a small ceramic mask in front of their face, featuring a white finish and spikes protruding from its surface
a ceramic mask with the face of a young girl whose hair is raising up in a flame-like tendril

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Joan Clare Brown Juxtaposes Anatomy and Memories in Poignant Porcelain Sculptures https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/02/joan-clare-brown-porcelain/ Tue, 11 Feb 2025 19:48:43 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=450187 Joan Clare Brown Juxtaposes Anatomy and Memories in Poignant Porcelain SculpturesDualities lie at the heart of the artist's approach to ceramics, especially in her ongoing series 'Ed.'

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Depending on how you look at them, the tendrils seemingly growing from Joan Clare Brown’s porcelain bases could be perceived as soft and delicate or spiny, defensive, and slightly unsettling. Dualities lie at the heart of the artist’s approach to ceramics, especially in her ongoing series Ed, which takes personal experience and human anatomy as starting points for a poignant study of grief.

“I started this series as a response to my father’s sudden passing,” Brown tells Colossal. “He was diagnosed with widespread pancreatic cancer and passed away the same day, ultimately of sepsis from complications of a perforated bowel.” In the Ed works, the cinched base, which mimics a frilly-edged textile cushion or pouch, represents a perforated organ, and the long, growing blades or tendrils emblematize infection.

a porcelain sculpture that resembles a bundle of white-and-brown textile with frills, with blue plant-like textured spikes or fronds emerging from it
“Ed #5” (2023), porcelain and mason stain, 6 x 4 x 5 inches

The inherent hardness and brittleness of porcelain juxtapose with the softness of textile-like surfaces and organic, plant-like fronds. Each color reflects specific childhood memories of Brown’s father, like the blue and green hues drawn from his favorite flannel shirt or light pinks and purples redolent of a tablecloth used at her family dinners.

“Through the permanence of the ceramic form, my hope was to turn something menacing and insidious into a nostalgic and meaningful reminder,” Brown says. “And by making these pieces, in a way, I feel that he is still present.”

Explore more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

a porcelain sculpture that resembles a bundle of textile with frills, with blue grass-like spikes or fronds emerging from it
“Ed #16” (2023), porcelain, mason stain, glaze, and luster, 7 x 6 x 4 inches
a detail of a porcelain sculpture that resembles a bundle of textile with frills, with blue grass-like spikes or fronds emerging from it
Detail of “Ed #13”
a porcelain sculpture that resembles a bundle of white-and-green textile with frills, with blue plant-like textured spikes or fronds emerging from it
“Ed #10” (2023), porcelain and mason stain, 7 x 5 x 5 inches
a porcelain sculpture that resembles a bundle of white-and-red textile with frills, with orange plant-like textured spikes or fronds emerging from it
“Ed #11” (2023), porcelain and mason stain, 7 x 8 x 7 inches
a porcelain sculpture that resembles a bundle of textile with frills, with blue grass-like spikes or fronds emerging from it
“Ed #12” (2023), porcelain and mason stain, 7 x 5 x 4 inches
a detail of a porcelain sculpture that resembles a bundle of white-and-red textile with frills, with orange plant-like textured spikes or fronds emerging from it
Detail of “Ed #11”
a porcelain sculpture that resembles a bundle of white textile with frills, with dark green plant-like textured spikes or fronds emerging from it
“Ed #4” (2022), porcelain and mason stain, 7 x 4 x 4 inches
a porcelain sculpture that resembles a bundle of white textile with pink frills, with dark orange plant-like textured spikes or fronds emerging from it
“Ed #3” (2022), porcelain, mason stain, glaze, and luster, 8 x 6 x 4 inches

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Signe Emdal’s Chromatic Weavings Manifest Wonder and Joy https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/02/signe-emdal-weaving/ Mon, 10 Feb 2025 16:10:00 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=450035 Signe Emdal’s Chromatic Weavings Manifest Wonder and JoyRadiating puffs of wool in vibrating colors give way to elegant, draping details.

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Twenty years ago, Signe Emdal founded a business that focused on making unique textile objects and garments, drawing on her background in jacquard weaving, fabric printing, and a range of other techniques. By 2021, though, she was feeling hemmed in and longed for a way to express herself through a more intuitive, less functional creative direction.

“It was time to free myself from a frame I no longer fit and make a new one,” she tells Colossal. “I had no idea what the new frame would look like, but I trusted that life would bring me something better if I said goodbye to a setup that didn’t bring me joy anymore.”

an abstract, bright weaving radiating fiber in red, white, and blue into a puffy form, with long fibers gathered and draping long at the bottom
“Maison” (2023)

A self-described “textile composer,” Emdal views the loom as a window where warp and weft interact to create storage vessels for memories. She is also deeply influenced by exploring new locations. “Art allows me to travel in a completely new way because I get to be in a creation process while spending time with or (being) in other cultures,” she says. Many works she makes on-site, influenced by her surroundings.

Process is central to Emdal’s artistic education and continues to be the primary influence in her practice. “Everything is process, and everything is changing all the time,” she says. “Nothing is ever going to be finished!” She shares that through textiles, she learned to hone her concentration on both physical and metaphysical levels, finding that the meditative methodology of weaving echoes how she views art-making and life more broadly.

Emdal’s related series Touch and Loop comprise sculptural, loom-woven wool in vibrant colors. From radiating puffs of vibrating color to elegant, draping details, her pieces are inspired by science fiction, feminism, art history, and music. “The sculptures are layers of delicate memories,” she says, embodying fragility, resilience, sophistication, and joy.

Emdal’s work will be included in the Textile Art Biennial Slovenia, which runs from May 31 to August 14 across five cities. Find more on Emdal’s website and Instagram.

an abstract, bright weaving with long fibers draping from the sides and the bottom
“Dreams of Gaia” (2024)
a detail of an abstract, bright weaving
Detail of “Dreams of Gaia”
an abstract, bright weaving radiating fiber in red, yellow, lilac, and green into a puffy form, with long teal fibers draping long at the bottom
“Heart of Nebula” (2024)
an abstract, bright weaving radiating fiber in other colors into a puffy form, with long fibers gathered and draping long at the bottom
“Fantasia” (2023)
an abstract weaving installed on the wall, primarily pink and green, with radiation tufts of fiber to make it appear very soft
“Acqua 4 ever/Evigheden” (2024)
an abstract, vibrantly colored weaving with green in the center and radiating fiber in other colors into a puffy form, with green fiber draping long at the bottom
“Spirit of Green” (2024)
a detail of an abstract, vibrantly colored weaving with green in the center and radiating fiber in other colors
Detail of “Spirit of Green”
an abstract weaving installed on the wall, primarily purple, with radiation tufts of fiber to make it appear very soft
“Murex 4ever” (2023)
an abstract, bright weaving radiating fiber in other colors into a puffy form, with orange fiber draping long at the bottom
“Silky Way” (2023)

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Order and Chaos Entwine in Abstract Embroideries by Kristine Stattin https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/02/kristine-stattin/ Wed, 05 Feb 2025 20:49:44 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=449856 Order and Chaos Entwine in Abstract Embroideries by Kristine StattinBursting with color and texture, Kristine Stattin's abstract embroideries evoke movement and energy.

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Where someone might see opposition, Kristine Stattin finds fitting companions. Working in her studio in the Occitanie region of southern France, the artist alternates between hand and machine embroidery as she layers long, sweeping lines and tiny, tufted French knots. The contrasts create tension and intrigue and ensure that Stattin doesn’t get too comfortable with any one mode.

“My work is all about the process, being in and surrendering to the moment, embracing the unknown, not being attached to outcomes and expectations, and bringing the threads to life,” she says.

a colorful abstract embroidery on blue fabric

Bursting with color and texture, Stattin’s abstract embroideries evoke movement and energy through several layers of thin, sewing thread stitched atop one another. There’s tension between orderly rows and chaotic smatterings. “Each new piece is an internal journey, a sort of enigma that asks to be solved, and I use the needle and threads to capture a feeling, movement, and life itself,” she shares.

Occasionally, appliqué, screen-printing, and acrylic-painted details appear in her pieces, and decisions to incorporate new materials are part of an instinctive process guided by the work itself. Color is similar, with combinations of pastel hues and bold, saturated palettes derived from nature, the artist’s surroundings, or even the way sewing thread falls on her table.

“I am interested in an intuitive, yet mindful process, to see where the threads will take me, to see and respond to what happens, and to work with eventual mistakes,” she says. “I embrace those mistakes as they often lead to new ideas that I bring into future work.”

Follow Stattin on Instagram for updates and glimpses into her process.

a detail of a colorful abstract embroidery on blue fabric
a colorful abstract embroidery on pink fabric
a detail of a colorful abstract embroidery on pink fabric
a colorful abstract embroidery on brown fabric
a detail of a colorful abstract embroidery on tan fabric
a colorful abstract embroidery on tan fabric
a colorful abstract embroidery on blue fabric
a detail image of a colorful abstract embroidery on brown fabric

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Wycliffe Stutchbury Configures Miniature Wood Shingles into Mesmerizing Arrangements https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/02/wycliffe-stutchbury-wood-shingles/ Wed, 05 Feb 2025 16:32:16 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=449799 Wycliffe Stutchbury Configures Miniature Wood Shingles into Mesmerizing Arrangements"I really just see myself as an editor of nature," the artist says.

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“Always in my mind is the desire to describe the landscape of the human body and the country,” says artist Wycliffe Stutchbury, whose elegant compositions are intimately tied to nature and a sense of place. He creates handmade wood shingles made from a range of sources like bog oak, holly, and ash, arranging the pieces into elemental compositions.

“I work with wood because it is full of surprises, and it is a miraculous material,” Stutchbury tells Colossal. “Its character, texture, fragility, robustness, and the way in which it records the passing of time… I really just see myself as an editor of nature.”

an abstract artwork in a long, horizontal format, made from tiny, dark wooden shingles
“Hundred Foot Drain 15,” excavated bog oak, 180 x 80 centimeters, Chatteris, Cambridgeshire

The artist is fascinated by the human relationship with landscape, or what he describes as “the struggle between our desire to impose form on the natural world and its unwillingness to conform.” No matter how we try to manipulate, use, or suppress the natural environment, it always shapes our efforts.

Stutchbury was formally trained as a furniture maker, and when he graduated from university, he focused on making what he calls “miniature realities,” or very precise models of everyday things, which he exhibited in large, white spaces. After university, he moved into a studio with some fellow graduates. The artist realized he needed to put the nose to the grindstone and began to gravitate back to woodworking.

“One day, I was walking home and the neighbour’s house was being re-roofed,” the artist says. “The builders had left the old roofing battens in the front garden, and I asked if I could take them away. The rain and sun and time had produced these wonderful colours on the timber.”

With his mind still in “miniature mode,” Stutchbury imagined a small tiled roof, and a textural wall panel clad with little shingles emerged. The rest is history, as they say. Over time, he experimented with different types of foraged wood, making larger panels, multi-piece installations, tapestry-like wall hangings and, most recently, architectural interventions.

detail of the side of an old stone barn clad in tiny wooden shingles in an undulating pattern
Detail of “The Craig”

His project “The Craig,” a title derived from the Gaelic word for rock, reinterprets the exterior cladding of a 17th-century stone barn in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire. Following the contours of the original stonework and the covered aisle through the center, Stutchbury applied hundreds of shingles in a delicately undulating pattern.

The artist harvested material for “The Craig” exclusively from fallen branches in the adjacent woods. “The title for each work is provided by the location that the timber is found,” he says. “I seek out fallen and forgotten wood, and how it has responded to its surroundings and environment provides me with the platform to work from.”

Stutchbury follows where the work takes him. “Although I strive to apply my own structure to these works through concentration and technical skill, I fail,” he says, adding:

I make mistakes, my concentration wanders, I change my mind, (and) I can’t maintain a straight line or a perfect sphere. I find I am being pulled toward an intuitive way of working, like stacking firewood. So, I allow the timber I have before me to lead the way, and through a process of editing, I try and reveal the qualities and narrative held within it.

The artist has been busy with commissions, including a trip in May to Maine—a region rich with Shingle Style architecture—where he will clad one elevation of a house on the coast. Explore more on the artist’s website.

a hanging tapestry-like artwork made of tiny, dark, wooden shingles
“Holme Fen 3,” handsawn excavated bog oak tiles hung on cotton twill, 330 x 228 centimeters
detail of an abstract artwork in a long, horizontal format, made from tiny, dark wooden shingles
“The Rodd,” discarded barn cladding, 127 x 79 centimeters, Prestigne, Powys
an abstract triptych artwork in a long, horizontal format, made from tiny, light gray, wooden shingles
“The Hill 10,” felled common holly, 180 x 90 centimeters, Abergavenny, Monmouthshire
tiny wooden shingles in an undulating pattern
Detail of “The Craig”
an abstract artwork in a long, horizontal format, made from tiny, dark wooden shingles in an undulating pattern
“Hundred Foot Drain 9,” excavated bog oak, 100 x 150 centimeters, Chatteris, Cambridgeshire
an abstract artwork in a long, horizontal format, made from tiny, gray wooden shingles
“Oakhill Park,” felled ash tree, 93 x 88 centimeters, Oakhill House, Hildenborough, Kent
a hanging tapestry-like artwork made of tiny, dark, wooden shingles, photographed against a stone wall
“Fenland Drape,” excavated bog oak and autumn leaves on 230gsm artists linen, 270 x 270 centimeters, Chatteris, Cambridgeshire / Lucas Gardens London SE5
an artwork in progress made of hundreds of tiny wooden shingles in curved arrangements
“Hundred Foot Drain 9” in progress

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Imaginative Scenes Vibrantly Expand in Shelley Aldrich’s Illustrated Tunnel Books https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/02/shelley-aldrich-tunnel-books/ Tue, 04 Feb 2025 16:55:01 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=449694 Imaginative Scenes Vibrantly Expand in Shelley Aldrich’s Illustrated Tunnel BooksAn 18th-century tradition inspires a series of vibrant books and folded visual narratives.

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Before photography, slide projectors, movies, television, or anything electronic, entertainment came from what we now think of as analog sources. In the 1700s, for example, your leisure time may have been spent listening to live music, visiting an art show or a theatre performance, playing games, and reading books.

Inspired by theatrical stage sets, one innovation that rose to popularity in the 18th century was the tunnel book. Known at the time as “peep shows,” the art form combined storytelling with numerous layers that, when opened up, created the illusory effect of depth and perspective. Typically small and delicate, the scenes frequently depicted figures in a range of landscapes and commemorated special events.

a gif of a tunnel book being opened to show its three-dimensional scene inside of the winter scene and lamp post through the wardrobe in Narnia
“Narnia Tunnel Book”

For self-taught illustrator Shelley Aldrich, the tradition inspires an ongoing series of vibrant books and folded visual narratives. Using primarily watercolor and gouache, she paints flowers and text that nod to folk tales and famous stories, like The Chronicles of Narnia and The Hobbit.

“I’ve always enjoyed crafts, but I didn’t really begin painting (or making) art until I was 45,” Aldrich tells Colossal. “My background was in marketing and financial analysis, which I did for more than 20 years. After I left my career to raise my girls, I fit painting into bits of free time to keep my mind growing.”

Aldrich learned the basics of creating a tunnel book from another artisan on Instagram, and she adapted the method to her own style. She always enjoyed stationery design, toys, and books that had tiny, hidden compartments or miniature surprises. She says, “It’s no wonder that when my first daughter was born, I started making tiny scrapbooks that involved moving elements: flaps that opened, hidden letters, mini books, and spinning objects. That was probably the beginning of my paper fascination.”

Aldrich continues to experiment with different paper tricks, such as sliding doors and increasingly elaborate folds. She constructs scenes inspired by nature, as well as recognizable elements of famous stories, like the magical portal from the first Narnia book, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.

a small paper tunnel book depicting the wardrobe from 'The Chronicles of Narnia,' which opens up to reveal the lamp post and winter scene
“Narnia Tunnel Book” (2024), open

“Recently, I have been discovering vintage paper art that is rarely seen except in museums,” Aldrich says. “I can’t wait to figure out all the techniques, mash them together and make modern pieces that have never been combined before.” She is currently experimenting with the possibilities of combining tunnel books with Victorian puzzle purses, which were used as a means of exchanging private or romantic messages that could be encased in intricate folds.

“I still love the feeling of awe when you experience something that makes your heart swell,” Aldrich says. “As you get older, I think this happens less because of the responsibilities and burdens of being an adult. You tend to see less magic. I hope, with my art, to evoke the childlike wonder and hope that is in all of us.”

Find more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

a folded, illustrated piece of paper that functions like a narrative that can be unfolded to reveal the message
‘The Hobbit’ combination puzzle purse and tunnel book, closed
an illustrated piece of paper that functions like a narrative that can be folded and unfolded to reveal the message
‘The Hobbit’ combination puzzle purse and tunnel book, open
a tunnel book showing a scene of a garden through an oval aperture, labeled with the word "blossom"
“Highgrove Tunnel Book” (2024)
a gif of a tunnel book being turned to show its folded sides and the three-dimensional scene of a garden inside
“Highgrove Tunnel Book” (2024)
a small paper tunnel book depicting a garden scene, with the words "Winter Garden" written underneath a cutout oval image
“Winter Garden Tunnel Book” (2024)
the exterior of a tunnel book, shaped like two large doors, which can be opened to reveal a narrative inside
“Wonka Tunnel Book” (2025), closed
the inside of a tunnel book made with paper and watercolor, depicting a garden scene from Willy Wonka
Detail of “Wonka Tunnel Book,” open
a gif of the inside of a tunnel book showing its three-dimensional scene inside of the winter scene and lamp post through the wardrobe in Narnia
Detail of “Narnia Tunnel Book”
a folded, illustrated piece of paper covered in flower designs that functions like a narrative that can be unfolded to reveal the message
Shakespearean sonnet combination puzzle purse and tunnel book, closed

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Imaginative Scenes Vibrantly Expand in Shelley Aldrich’s Illustrated Tunnel Books appeared first on Colossal.

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Naomi Peterson Channels a Sweet Tooth and Sense of Togetherness in Her Vibrant ‘Cup-Cakes’ https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/02/naomi-peterson-cup-cakes/ Tue, 04 Feb 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=449662 Naomi Peterson Channels a Sweet Tooth and Sense of Togetherness in Her Vibrant  ‘Cup-Cakes’Layers reminiscent of fondant, ice cream scoops, berries, and sprinkles decorate ceramic sweets.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Naomi Peterson Channels a Sweet Tooth and Sense of Togetherness in Her Vibrant ‘Cup-Cakes’ appeared first on Colossal.

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Frosted sponge and overstuffed pies are just a few of the sweet treats Naomi Peterson crafts from clay. Her playful “cup-cakes” take confectionery as a starting point, adding layers reminiscent of fondant, ice cream scoops, berries, and sprinkles.

Many of Peterson’s pieces are functional, incorporating lids or handles to be used as vessels or coffee mugs. “I’m drawn to visual sweetness, imagining the potential enjoyment of confectioneries rather than physically consuming them,” she tells Colossal. “I actually prefer savory and salty foods to sweet ones!”

a confectionery-inspired ceramic vessel with a topiary-like top on the lid
“Topiary Jar 2”

Flowers complement playful lattice patterns in vibrant hues, sometimes leaning into a garden theme with topiary forms. Peterson relies on an intuitive approach that combines wheel-thrown techniques with hand-building methods like coils, slabs, and pinching. “I construct different forms and plan surfaces later,” she says. “I find if I pre-plan the surface and shape from the beginning, the process becomes too controlled, limiting spontaneity.”

Once the basic form is complete, Peterson adds or removes elements through darting—cutting wedge-shaped pieces from a cylinder of clay—and embellishing with sprig or press molds. “My surfaces require many applications and separate firings to achieve vibrant, layered effects,” she says. “Before ceramics, I spent many years painting mainly with oils, influencing much of my surface decisions.”

We often think of confectionery as a token of joy, celebration, and togetherness. Every cake and bon bon reflects Peterson’s interest in relationships and the way our actions and emotions entwine us with others and our communities. The spaces in between the dot patterns are essential, “not to keep each element distant but to connect them,” she says. “Although not physically connected, each of us is important as part of a whole.”

Peterson’s work will be part of Dirt Folk: Planted, a pop-up exhibition running concurrently with the 2025 National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts conference in March in Salt Lake City. If you’re on the East Coast, you’ll be able to see her work in Lines and Patterns from March 22 to May 24 at Baltimore Clayworks. Find more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

a selection of confectionery-inspired sculptural objects in bright colors with frosting-like details
Assorted “Cakes”
a confectionery-inspired ceramic vessel with a topiary-like top on the lid and pink flowers around the body
“Flower Pot”
a selection of confectionery-inspired sculptural objects in bright colors with frosting-like details
Assorted “Bon Bons”
a confectionery-inspired ceramic vessel with an flower-like top on the lid and red-and-purple berry-like flowers around the body
“Bloom Cake 2”
a selection of confectionery-inspired sculptural objects in bright colors with frosting-like details
Assorted “Bon Bons”
a confectionery-inspired ceramic vessel with a bright yellow body and pink plaid detail with blue flower-like bobbles
“Pluff Jar”
a selection of confectionery- and flower-inspired mugs in a variety of bright colors and patterns
Confectionery-inspired mugs
a confectionery-inspired ceramic vessel with an ice cream scoop-like top on the lid and blue flowers around the body
“Harmonia”
a selection of confectionery-inspired sculptural objects in bright colors with frosting-like details
Assorted “Cakes”

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Michelle Robinson’s Passementerie Weavings Demonstrate Elaborate Detail and Design https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/01/michelle-robinson-weavi/ Tue, 28 Jan 2025 21:15:00 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=449167 Michelle Robinson’s Passementerie Weavings Demonstrate Elaborate Detail and Design"I am a chronic over-thinker and the countless options afforded in fiber work can often lead to a writer-block of sorts," Robinson says.

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Continuing her practice rooted in the extensive art of passementerie, Michelle Robinson weaves vibrant threads into geometric wall hangings that curve, puff, and meander.

Over the last two years, the Sydney-based artist has been learning how to spin fiber. “I didn’t expect the pure meditative state spinning allows, which is in stark contrast to the complex pre-planning that is involved for my weaving practice, especially passementerie,” she explains. “I am a chronic over-thinker and the countless options afforded in fiber work can often lead to a writer-block of sorts.”

two wall hangings comprised of vibrant textured fibers woven in the style of passementerie while incorporating geometric, curving forms

Though Robinson initially had goals to scale up her work, she’s instead found more growth in creating an ongoing series of small-scale iterations, experimenting with different fibers, yarn denier, and and color palettes.

Robinson has been also been working on incorporating her vast personal collection of of woven textile cloths, embellishments, and wallpaper, which she still keeps from her previous endeavors in soft furnishings.

Find more on the artist’s Instagram.

vibrant textured fibers woven in the style of passementerie while incorporating geometric, curving forms
vibrant textured fibers woven in the style of passementerie while incorporating geometric, curving forms
vibrant textured fibers woven in the style of passementerie while incorporating geometric, curving forms
detail of vibrant textured fibers woven in the style of passementerie while incorporating geometric, curving forms
vibrant textured fibers woven in the style of passementerie while incorporating geometric, curving forms
a wall tapestry woven from vibrant fibers, incorporating geometric forms
detail of a wall tapestry woven from vibrant fibers, incorporating geometric forms

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Deniz Kurdak Crafts Fragility and Resilience in Embroidered Depictions of Porcelain https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/01/deniz-kurdak-porcelain-textiles/ Mon, 27 Jan 2025 17:30:00 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=449183 Deniz Kurdak Crafts Fragility and Resilience in Embroidered Depictions of PorcelainThe London-based artist is fascinated by blue-and-white porcelain and the way certain pieces inspire familiarity.

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“What draws me to the motif of ceramics is the deep sense of belonging they evoke in me,” says Deniz Kurdak. The London-based artist is fascinated by blue-and-white porcelain—a style that originated in China as early as the 7th century and was broadly imitated and collected around the globe—and the way certain pieces inspire familiarity. She adds, “They have even found their way into my grandmother’s home.”

Themes of identity, belonging, and memory play central roles in Kurdak’s work, as she draws on personal histories and bases her compositions on real objects that remind her of pieces her grandmother owned.

a colorful embroidery of broken plate pieces
“Fragments,” 30 x 40 centimeters

“Growing up with an abusive father, I found sanctuary in my grandparents’ home—a safe, predictable, and nurturing space where I felt accepted,” the artist tells Colossal. “Along with my admiration for blue-and-white porcelain, my passion for textiles and embroidery was passed down to me by my grandmother.”

Bringing conceptual elements to needlework, a craft traditionally dismissed in art circles as “women’s work,” she emphasizes expression and narrative. “I like to reimagine the acts of cutting, stitching, and embroidering as forms of emotional repair,” she says, “allowing me to reconstruct and navigate the complexities of my personal history.”

Long associated with its calming and meditative nature, “embroidery has become both a medium and a means of reflection in my artistic process,” Kurdak says. Seemingly at odds with making intimate and methodical stitches, her images suggest the violence of breakage, suddenness, and the relationship between ornament and utility.

Kurdak is intrigued by dualities—fragility and resilience, belonging and displacement—which mirror the tensions and contradictions of the human condition. Contrasting brittle yet durable porcelain with pliable yet resistant fabric and thread, she highlights polarities in the act of merging the ideas together.

an embroidery of a red-and-white porcelain plate broken into pieces
“Not Even Close,” 48 x 48 centimeters

Blue-and-white porcelain predominantly inspires Kurdak’s compositions, but she also renders red, green, or multi-colored pieces in textiles, too. She uses a wide range of needlework and fabric techniques, including appliqué, lacework, and embroidery. Vases appear to melt into streams, lacy decorations hover above the surface, and motifs rearrange into puzzle-like grids or dynamic swirls.

If you’re in London, “Willow” is currently on view at the Young Masters Art Prize Finalists Exhibition through April 8. Kurdak’s work will be included in Collect Art Fair opening in late February at Somerset House, followed by Affordable Art Fair in March in New York. Learn more on her website, and followed updates on Instagram.

an embroidery of blue-and-white porcelain pieces arranged like puzzle pieces
“Willow,” 60 x 60 centimeters
an embroidery of a blue-and-white porcelain jar with the decoration in long blue streams in the lower half
“Jar Descending,” 120 x 90 centimeters
a lacework art piece of a blue-and-white porcelain motif on a white background
“Anguish in Blue,” 27 x 47 centimeters
a detail of a lacework art piece of a blue-and-white porcelain motif on a white background
Detail “Anguish in Blue”
an embroidery of a green-and-white porcelain plate broken into pieces
“Disjointed,” 49 x 49 centimeters
an embroidery of a blue-and-white porcelain plate swirling on one side
“Dissolving Willow,” 55 x 55 centimeters
an embroidery of blue-and-white porcelain jar pieces arranged like puzzle pieces
“Mother Jar,” 80 x 80 centimeters
a detail of a textile artwork of blue-and-white porcelain plate pieces appliqued on a green background
Detail of “Pieces on Green”
an embroidery of a blue-and-white porcelain plate broken into pieces
“This Beyond,” 49 x 49 centimeters

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Deniz Kurdak Crafts Fragility and Resilience in Embroidered Depictions of Porcelain appeared first on Colossal.

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