Hi all! My artwork “New Perspectives” is up for auction in the 14th Annual UPwithART fundraiser supporting Unity Project London and Museum London here in Ontario!
You can view this piece in-person at the Museum's exhibition from April 26 to May 3 – free admission. Save the date for the arty-party on May 4 and get your tickets and/or donate now at UPwithART.ca !
This event will help support the unhoused members of our community access shelter and move to permanent housing as quickly as possible. Support would mean a lot for this cause. :)
2K notes
·
View notes
Luna Lu: 'The Anatomy of a Hug' (2016)
1K notes
·
View notes
Hand Vase // Megan Made This
241 notes
·
View notes
my sculpture came out exactly how i wanted it :))
241 notes
·
View notes
Kitty pitcher made last year ✨
159 notes
·
View notes
~ Cylinder Vessel with Palace Scene.
Place of origin: Guatemala, Petén, Dos Pilas or vicinity
Culture: Maya, lk style
Date: A.D. 740–800
Medium: Slip-painted ceramic with post-fire pigment.
162 notes
·
View notes
Untitled - Arjan van Helmond , 2022.
Dutch, b. 1971 -
Ceramic painting
152 notes
·
View notes
I made a ceramic plate based on one of the embroidered designs from Copia's skeleton stole!
(reference photos under the cut)
~
Figured this was a subtle yet cool way to incorporate my love of Ghost and Copia into my pottery :)
I'm obsessed with this stole and want one so bad (especially because I'm about to graduate college and will be wearing a boring university one 😪)
145 notes
·
View notes
For #NationalTeaDay 🫖☕️:
Teapot with Fossil Decoration
British, Staffordshire, c. 1760–65
Salt-glazed stoneware with enamel decoration
4 1/4 × 7 1/4 in. (10.8 × 18.4 cm)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York 37.22.6a,b
“Though it's got a surprisingly modern look, this teapot was made in the 18th-century in Staffordshire—the heart of Britain's pottery industry. The area’s limestone yielded prehistoric fossils, and potters often turned them into whimsical motifs for teapots.”
61 notes
·
View notes
Blep artist cup! The notch often comes when a piece's rim is wobbly or imperfect (like when I bump it by accident). It's perfect to hold a brush. Instead of balancing it like a goblin.
(I'm the goblin)
164 notes
·
View notes