Rachel Foxwell
Elements of Light, Medium Vessel (gradients of yellow-orange), 2023
Porcelain, slab built with engobe slips, unglazed and hand polished
height 4 7/8 x width 5 7/8 in
height 12.5 x width 15 cm
height 12.5 x width 15 cm
Artist's signature 'RF' marked on base
Copyright the artist
Rachel's tutor was master ceramicist Geoffrey Swindell. Landscapes and everyday life are her source of inspiration. Slab building, colour and ceramic slip development are her specialisms. Inspired by the ever...
Rachel's tutor was master ceramicist Geoffrey Swindell. Landscapes and everyday life are her source of inspiration. Slab building, colour and ceramic slip development are her specialisms. Inspired by the ever changing lines, compositions and colours of landscapes and the shapes of everyday life, Rachel Foxwell rigorously applies coloured slips to earthenware clay slabs. “They are white earthenware, always mistaken for porcelain, and I spend a long time sanding and polishing the bare clay to create the contrast of super smooth clay against the textured slip surface.” The result? Colourful vessels with intricate, abstract surfaces which reveal themselves the closer you look. After a degree in ceramics at Cardiff University, Rachel opened her first studio in Bath. Since then she has moved to Frome, where she is now “bringing ideas to life” and happily “mixing ceramic slips and creating a range of colours, tones and shades.”
"I master my own technique of slab building, using the clay as a canvas. I apply ceramic slips which I have developed over the years in intricate layers to create abstract compositions with textured and tactile surfaces."
"I have developed the traditional skills of slab building to create contemporary, elegant forms. I roll the clay into very thin slabs and use it as a canvas – joining the slab together at the end. This means the seam is still visible and reveals my method of making."
*From homofaber.com excerpts and interview
"I master my own technique of slab building, using the clay as a canvas. I apply ceramic slips which I have developed over the years in intricate layers to create abstract compositions with textured and tactile surfaces."
"I have developed the traditional skills of slab building to create contemporary, elegant forms. I roll the clay into very thin slabs and use it as a canvas – joining the slab together at the end. This means the seam is still visible and reveals my method of making."
*From homofaber.com excerpts and interview