

This compact ceramic form reads as a fertile mass—part vessel, part organism—its crown of clustered nodules swelling like berries or coral, suggesting abundance poised on the edge of mutation. The near-black cobalt glaze, mirror-bright in places and pitted elsewhere, turns light into a slow-moving skin, where reflections ripple across bulges and sink into a single dark aperture. Composed as a quiet confrontation between containment and eruption, the piece proposes that what we try to hold—memory, desire, growth—inevitably pushes outward into tactile excess. Its deep monochrome collapses ornament into silhouette, letting texture become the true narrative: sensual, uncanny, and insistently alive.







