Accidental
1.160,00 € IVA incluido
This piece rests on a delicate balance: an open form supported by a minimal base, a thin wall that allows light to pass through, and a subtly gold-finished rim. Its presence is light yet steady, defined as much by what it reveals as by what it allows to be seen.
The crack running through the piece emerged from an unforeseen accident. A small impact before firing caused an almost imperceptible fissure, which opened further during the kiln process. Rather than being corrected, this wound became part of the piece and ultimately defined it.
Today, the form cannot be conceived without this opening. The crack reveals the fineness of the wall and disrupts the initial balance, incorporating chance as part of the process. The piece embraces error not as failure, but as transformation, reminding us that the unexpected also shapes identity.
Features
Mixed media: roll, gilding
21x25cm, recycled ceramic 1125º, gold leaf (23.75kt)
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Reborn
Reborn is a collection rooted in one of the core values of my work: a profound respect for the planet and for nature. In a ceramics studio, waste is generated continuously—clays, glazes, sediments—materials that are usually discarded. To avoid this, I began exploring ways to collect, recover and transform them.
These pieces are born from those sediments, which we gather, decant and dry until they become a workable clay body. Its unpredictable consistency dictates the process: it limits certain shapes, guides others, and often forces me to let go of the initial idea so the material can speak for itself.
Most of the pieces are built using my own reinterpretation of the ancient coil technique, used since prehistoric times. I form clay rolls and stack them slowly, joining them with my fingers; afterward, I apply a thinner layer of the same clay and drag small fragments across the surface with my hands to create organic, imperfect textures. This tactile language celebrates simplicity, time, and the beauty found in raw materiality.
In harmony with this philosophy, many pieces include gold details inspired by the spirit of Japanese kintsugi, highlighting seams, marks or fractures and transforming them into elements of beauty and meaning. The intention is not to hide imperfection, but to elevate it.
Because recycled material behaves irregularly, each piece presents natural stains, cracks and variations that are intrinsic to its identity. The gold leaf finish is delicate; to clean it, use an extra-soft cotton cloth. These pieces are not suitable for holding liquids or functional use, though some may be used as vases for dried flowers.
Reborn transforms waste into beauty, and time into form. Each work is a transformed vestige — unique, unrepeatable, and deeply connected to its origin.














