Artists, PottersCeramicsExquisite British and International Craftsmanship. Curating a personal collection for the cherished interior.View Our Online Selection A Abigail Schama Akiko HiraiAlice JohnsonAntonio Julio López Castro B Borja MorontaBruce NuskeBy Raffaella C Caroline Slotte Catherine DixCécile DaladierCelia DowsonChinoko SakamotoChloé Rosetta Bell D Daniel SmithDerek Wilson E Elaine Sheppard BoltEnrico DonadelloEva Brandt G Gail Gulland H Henk WolversHoJung KimHeidi Hentze I Iva Polachova J JaeJun LeeJustine Allison K Katie SpraggKati Tuominen-NiittyläKina Björklund L Lisa StockhamLauren Nauman M Maria KristoferssonMasamichi YoshikawaMatthias KaiserMizuyo Yamashita N Nicola TassieNina MalterudNosan Claystudio P Paul Philp R Rowena Brown S Studio Maarten Kolk & Guus KustersStudio MC Sue Paraskeva T Tamotsu SuzukiTim Lake V Vezzini & Chen Y Yuta Segawa Abigail Schama, British ceramicist. Exploring subtleties of wheel-thrown forms and painterly surfaces. Akiko Hirai, A renowned Japanese Potter in South East, London. Raw textured surfaces were fired multiple times in her hand-built gas kiln. Alice Johnson is a recent graduate of the Royal College of Art evoking a sense of joy, humour, and nostalgia. Borja Moronta, a Spanish ceramicist based in Edinburgh, creates calm and neutral minimalistic pieces that connect purpose and beauty. Bruce Nuske, an Australian Potter based in Adelaide. A sense of ‘plantness’ a source of pleasure, reflection and loss. ‘By Raffaella’ an Italian potter based in London. Raffaella's handmade ceramics are inspired by the qualities of the materials she uses. Catherine Dix, French Ceramic Artist. A game of construction takes place, in search of the perfect balance. Caroline Slotte, a Finnish Ceramic Artist interested in found objects. Cécile Daladier, a French Potter based in rural Drôme. Informed by the elements and processes of the natural world. Celia Dowson, a London-based artist capturing the deep greens of rainforests during monsoon season, and the indigo blue mountains. Chinoko Sakamoto, a Japanese Sculptor, based in Nagasaki. Inspired by modernist sculptures such a Constantin Brancusi. Chloé Rosetta Bell, a British Ceramic Artist based on the Isle of Wight. Using a glaze developed from oyster shells. Daniel Smith, British Ceramic Artist whose modest vessels show how sensual the utilitarian can be. Derek Wilson, a Northern Irish Ceramic Artist. A twenty-first-century hybridization of a Studio Potter and Conceptual Artist. Elaine Sheppard Bolt is a ceramic artist creating works steeped in the context of her surroundings in the chalk and flint hills of East Sussex. Enrico Donadello. Creating stoneware objects from his Italian studio. Eva Brandt, a Danish Ceramic Artist. Influenced by Eva’s experience in native Indian pottery. Gail Gulland, a British Ceramicist. Finely cast translucent and textured ceramics in bone china and porcelain. Henk Wolvers, a Dutch Ceramicist. Porcelain revealing movement and transparency. HoJung Kim, a Ceramic Artist from South Korea. Exploring the relationship between colours, community and material investigation. Iva Polachova, a London-based potter of Czech Origin seeking clarity, simplicity, balance and tactility in her work. JaeJun Lee, a Korean Potter. Exquisite contemporary ceramics fusing function and beauty. Justine Allison, a British potter working in porcelain. Pattern and texture create subtle, unique variations. Katie Spragg, a British Ceramic Artist. Plant-inspired ceramic sculptures made from hand-modelled porcelain and stoneware clays. Kati Tuominen-Niittylä, Finnish ceramic artist reimagines the container, infusing it with earthy tones and elegant simplicity. Kina Björklund, a Swedish Ceramic Artist. Antique objects are tools to press into the clay. Lisa Stockham, a London-based Ceramic Artist. Inspired by the textile patterns of Indian woodblock printing. Lauren Nauman, an American Ceramic Artist. With metal as an aesthetic reference to create pieces with minimal amounts of clay. Maria Kristofersson, a Swedish Potter. Focusing on Proximity, Distance Lines, Surfaces and Textures, Masamichi Yoshikawa, a Japanese potter based in Tokoname. Yoshikawa specializes in porcelain with a pale blue seihakuji glaze. Matthias Kaiser, an Austrian potter based in Vienna. Raw materials directly from their source - a rich, unpredictable palette of tones to form sculptures with. Mizuyo Yamashita, a Japanese Potter based in London. Carved with chisels, a popular technique in Japan called Kezuri. Nina Malterud, a Norwegian Ceramic Artist. The object comes alive through many layers of glazing and firings. Nicola Tassie, a British Ceramic Artist. Creating eclectic jugs that compliment and contrast surface, texture and glaze. Seong-il Hong & Hye-jin Lee, of Nosan Claystudio, S.Korean ceramicists. Vessels & teaware from the tea-growing region of Boseong. Paul Philp, a Studio Potter based in Bath. Hand-built vessels and layered glazes create an intricate depth in his surfaces. Rowena Brown, an artist based on the Isle of Iona. Ceramics that study architectural spaces. Sue Paraskeva, is a British artist working with thrown and altered porcelain vessels to explore poetic fragility. Studio Maarten Kolk & Guus Kusters, a Dutch Design Duo developing glazes that are painted on the plaster mould. Studio MC, based in Darmstadt, Germany. Utilising the versatility of clay to embrace chance and unpredictability. Tamotsu Suzuki a Japanese potter based in Yamanashi. His craftsmanship is inspired by plants that live powerfully in nature. Tim Lake, a Welsh potter based in Cilycwm. Handmade, kick-wheel thrown stoneware ceramics. Vezzini & Chen, a creative duo based in London. Ceramics and glass interacting to create a compelling visual dialogue. Yuta Segawa, a Japanese Ceramic Artist based in London. Specialising in producing miniature pottery.