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Art Homewares

Australian ceramicists: 6 you need to know!

I have a thing for ceramics. There’s something about art which you can hold in your hands, knowing that the artist who lovingly made it, also did so with theirs. Unlike paintings, you can often buy a smaller, ‘entry level’ piece so start a collection. And it will give you so much joy, trust me! You don’t just look at ceramics you can hold them too. Some even have important jobs besides looking pretty, like displaying flowers! And you can never have too many beautiful little dishes (like the Carla Dinnage ones below) dotted around your home to hold things like earrings, hairbands, keys, you name it!

So, let me introduce you to six great ceramicists and their work; some I’ve loved for years and some who are recent and exciting discoveries!

CARLA DINNAGE

Carla is Melbourne-based and has been on our radar for the longest time (with my love of gold, pink and green, that’s probably no surprise!). She studied fine art ceramics at RMIT in 1994. After travelling and a few different jobs in admin, marketing and merchandising, she married and had four kids in six years!

“Because I was so busy with the kids I really needed a creative outlet which led me back into my ceramics. I started to make a few small pieces and was driving out to Dandenong to get them fired. Friends and family started to then purchase my pieces so I knew there was a market out there,” she says.

“I purchased my first kiln and started my Instagram account. I then started to get a lot of wholesale inquiries. I now have two large kilns which run around the clock seven days a week and am stocked in over 40 stores Australia wide.”

Carla Dinnage

Shop Carla Dinnage

FORMANTICS

Susan Christie is the woman behind Formantics. This was going to be an Australian roundup until we saw this New Zealander’s work (being represented over here by Greenhouse Interiors) and had to include it! She’s based in Auckland. I mean, wow.

Formantics

“I get very excited about playing with colour and form, whilst exploring ideas of balance and symmetry,” Susan says.

She discovered clay in the last year of her fine arts degree in 2015. “Now I’m obsessed! I traded in my profession as a psychologist to pursue art and have finally found what makes my tail wag!”

Formantics’ style is very varied

Shop Formantics

MARLEY & LOCKYER 

I’ve been following Ness Lockyer and her work for as long as I’ve been blogging, I’m sure!

Based in Tamar Valley, Tasmania, she makes small batch, handmade ceramics featuring her own hand drawn calligraphy and artwork. You could say she’s multi-talented!

Ness says she’s been an artist from as soon as she could hold a pencil. “But I was always scared to show my work to people, so I tucked it away for years. It wasn’t until I went on maternity leave with our first child, from a corporate job, that the need to create again became huge. I started my blog and making small things in ceramics (I hated ceramics at school, funnily enough), as well as screen printing my designs onto linen to sew into cushions. It just grew from there.”

Ness started doing architecture when she left school, but realised her love for interiors and homewares was what really lit her up. “I’m glad that’s how it happened as I couldn’t imagine doing anything else now.” 

Shop Marley & Lockyer

EARTH DARLINGS

Madeline King is the creative force behind Earth Darlings, based on the Sunshine Coast in QLD. She makes all her pieces in her home studio.

“My style is warm, playful and honest,” she says.

Madeline majored in ceramics at university in the final year of a visual arts degree and became hooked!

“I have worked in various home studios since, between day jobs and then having children. Most recently, it’s been fulfilling to share my work more widely. “

Shop Earth Darlings

ALICE BELL CERAMICS

Alice is based in Barwon Heads, VIC, and describes her work as bold and rustic stoneware.

“I am originally from Tasmania however our family are residing in Barwon Heads for a change of scenery while our three girls are young. I started ceramics in Tasmania as a six-week course which focussed on the three basic hand building techniques.

“I loved it and so kept practicing ceramics in my home studio in Launceston for many years, selling ceramics to friends and family.”

Shop Alice Bell Ceramics

KAZ CERAMICS

Karen Morton is Kaz Ceramics and she works from her purpose built studio on her property in Mount Eliza, overlooking the Moorooduc plains. “It’s surrounded by lush trees and wildlife and its proximity to my home makes it easy for late-night kiln loading and sneak-peeking when I’m working on new projects!”

Kaz (another we’ve been a fan of for years!) describes her work as organic and textural with pops of colour. 

“I dabbled a little with ceramics when I was doing my painting degree in Ireland. It wasn’t until many years later when I became pregnant and had the most acute sense of smell and couldn’t stand the smell of oil paint, that I returned to working with clay and rediscovered my love for it. It’s such a beautiful natural material to work with; very rewarding and, like kids, definitely tests your patience.

“I was also working at a school at the time in the ceramics department and was introduced to Julia Green from Greenhouse Interiors who filled her car boot with my work and knocked on the door of  Husk. I’ll never forget Julia calling me later that day to say they loved the pieces so much that they wanted to place a trial order for 300 of them. I nearly died!

“It’s been non-stop since that day really! I love what I do, spend a lot of hours in my studio and have such a great team of people around me. I consider myself very fortunate.”

Shop Kaz Ceramics

I hope you enjoyed this roundup. Let us know who YOU love in the comments!

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Designers Homewares

Our favourite handmade Aussie ceramics

I’ve done a lot of homewares roundups in my time, but very few have been this tricky. There are just too many amazing ceramicists out there! This list could have been endless but here are some of my absolute favourites, all lovingly handmade right here in Australia. 

Kaz: Mornington Peninsula artist Karen Morton is the maker behind Kaz. Creating both functional and non-functional pieces, her ceramics feature unexpected symbols, broad brushstrokes and wallpaper patterns.

Kaz

Takeawei: Fun, functional and hand-crafted, the pieces bring together a mix of organic shapes and textures with bright colours and a sense of humour. Each ware is designed to be used and is handmade in Torquay, Victoria.

Takeawei

Bridget Bodenham: Specialising in ceramic tableware, utensils, jewellery, planter pots and flower vases; the tones and textures of Bridget’s wares pay homage to her bush setting in country Victoria.

Bridget Bodenham

Leaf & Co: Inspired by nature from the curves of a wave to the lines of a landscape, all the ceramics give a nod to the environment. Working out of Mount Glorious (an hour from Brisbane), Leaf & Co is a family affair, designed by a mother and her two daughters.

Leaf & Co

Carla Dinnage: Offering a wide range of beautifully coloured ceramic bowls and wall hangings, each piece is individually handmade and hand designed in Melbourne. The wares features strong influences from Mexico, the Middle East and Europe.

Carla Dinnage

Vanessa Bean: Full of personality, owner Vanessa Holle turns everyday functional objects into figurative sculptures, with sweet hand painted faces. Made in Sydney, the pieces feature vibrant colours and decorative drawings.

Vanessa Bean

Daisy Cooper Ceramics: Handcrafted in Melbourne using traditional methods of pinching and coiling clay, the wares are natural and ergonomically shaped. Growing up in Scotland, Daisy is inspired by the wilderness, seen through her forms and colours.

Daisy Cooper Ceramics

Sophie Moran: With an aim to create minimal, handmade vessels that return significance and meaning to household objects, each piece can be used and enjoyed on a daily basis. Made in Melbourne from both porcelain and stoneware, the designs merge traditional and modern techniques.

Sophie Moran

La petite fabrique de Brunswick: Originally from France, but now living in Melbourne’s Brunswick, owner Lucille Sciallano specialises in slip cast ceramics. Producing bowls, cups, teapots and more, she creates patterns and drawings by using pigments to colour the porcelain.

La petite fabrique de Brunswick

We hope you liked the list! Let us know what you would add.

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Homewares Styling

Ivy Muse release second limited edition range of plant stands

Melbourne-based botanical wares studio IVY MUSE today launched Nightshade, their second collection of limited edition plant stands, and here’s a first look at them. To celebrate the follow-up to their inaugural collection in October, they commissioned renowned local ceramicist Ingrid Tufts to produce an exclusive range of pots to complement them.

Nightshade11_Crop REDUCED

Nightshade draws its inspiration from the simplicity of a winter sunset, with a pared back aesthetic and focus on intense colour. Each design is available in black and white, plus a limited edition colour unique to that design; Navy (Quay), Electric Blue (Arrow), Blush Clay (Empire) and Frost (Chrysalis).

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Nightshade includes two smaller stands (Chrysalis and Quay) for pots to sit on (and in the Chrysalis) as well as two taller stands (Empire and Arrow). As with the previous collection, each IVY MUSE stand was designed to allow the customer maximum flexibility and creativity in the many ways they can house plants, and are suitable for a variety of pot sizes and shapes.

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Tufts’ handmade limited edition pots are wheel-thrown from beautiful iron-bearing stoneware, then combined with soft pastel glazes to allow the clay to gently reveal its natural character. The pots are available in one size with three colour options (Marshmallow, Peach and Ice Blue).

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IVY MUSE is the brainchild of longtime friends Jacqui Vidal and Alana Langan. Jacqui, founder of art retailer Signed & Numbered, together with Alana, interior stylist and owner of online boutique Hunt & Bow, launched the business with a mission to produce beautiful, functional stands that encourage people to get creative with their greenery.

Designed by Jacqui and Alana, the stands are made from steel — for durability and strength — then powder-coated to add beautiful colour and a perfect finish. They are made from start to finish in Melbourne.

The stands retail for $170 and can be purchased online or from over 20 stockists across Australia. The pots are also available online. International shipping also available.

Photography: Annette O’Brien | Styling: Alana Langan

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Designers Homewares Interviews

Up and coming ceramicist Hayden Youlley on starting your own art business

For Hayden Youlley, being a ceramicist wasn’t always on the cards.  It wasn’t until his second year at the College of Fine Arts (COFA) that he first started working with clay. And he was hooked.

Hayden Youlley 6

“I realised straight away that it appealed to me in many ways,” Hayden says. “It’s the only medium I have found that I can use to design, prototype, realise and manufacture products myself.”

Graduating in 2011, Hayden has now come a long way since those first years at COFA. Founding his own company, Hayden Youlley Design, he has now been full-time self-employed for two years.

Hayden Youlley 5

His first studio output, which remains a best seller, was the Paper tableware, in both white and colour. A functional dinnerware range that uses a simple creased paper motif, it is cast by hand in porcelain. Transforming the fragile and creased paper into something robust, permanent and precious, the random distribution of creases creates a complex pattern of light, shade and texture.

For Hayden, the Paper series is much more than a design, but a mark of how far he has come: “I still have the first prototype cup sitting on my desk in my studio. It is tiny, not well finished and the paper detail is so faint it is almost unnoticeable, but it showed so much potential that I instantly knew I wouldn’t be able to stop working on it until I had realised the idea fully.”

Hayden Youlley 7

Bringing a design to life is never easy, however thanks to an ArtStart grant from the Australian Council, Hayden was able to get the monetary support he needed.

“The ArtStart program was established to give financial assistance to recent art and design graduates to help them make the transition from studying to having a professional career in the arts,” explains Hayden. “That support allowed me to try new ways of marketing — like trade show events, professional photography and a professional redesign of my website — that were otherwise financially prohibitive. I finished 2013 having grown noticeably and substantially as a result.”

With the financial backing, Hayden Youlley Design has continued to grow. The new Tessellate series, a set of functional porcelain bowls that can stand alone or be clustered together, is now on the market. Some exciting collaborations are also in the works, including a Paper lighting series and a cutlery range.

Hayden Youlley 2

Hayden hopes the future sees him continuing to design and create from a shared, multi-disciplinary warehouse studio.His dream studio would have a street front gallery and a space for the public to take casual classes, buy handmade objects and watch designers and makers in action.

For a list of stockists visit Hayden Youlley Design here.