10” x 9” x 4”
Created as part of Short Stories, this hand-built ceramic sculpture explores femininity through form, material, and accumulation. The arch, an architectural symbol of passage and endurance, is softened through clusters of floral elements that reference dolls, domestic ornament, and hyper-feminine visual language.
Constructed in terra cotta rather than porcelain, the material resists ideas of purity and delicacy often imposed on women. Instead, its mineral-rich surface bears visible evidence of pressure, repetition, and touch. Each individually formed floral element is pinched, pulled, and attached by hand, allowing labor and process to remain present on the surface.
Sold individually, each Floral Arch functions as a singular object while belonging to a broader narrative. Together, the sculptures operate like fragments of a visual diary, holding stories shaped by care, constraint, endurance, and growth.
10” x 9” x 4”
Created as part of Short Stories, this hand-built ceramic sculpture explores femininity through form, material, and accumulation. The arch, an architectural symbol of passage and endurance, is softened through clusters of floral elements that reference dolls, domestic ornament, and hyper-feminine visual language.
Constructed in terra cotta rather than porcelain, the material resists ideas of purity and delicacy often imposed on women. Instead, its mineral-rich surface bears visible evidence of pressure, repetition, and touch. Each individually formed floral element is pinched, pulled, and attached by hand, allowing labor and process to remain present on the surface.
Sold individually, each Floral Arch functions as a singular object while belonging to a broader narrative. Together, the sculptures operate like fragments of a visual diary, holding stories shaped by care, constraint, endurance, and growth.