Manufactory
Lisa Rosemann
About the object: Lisa Rosemann's white porcelain vessels, painted in shades of blue, can be used both as vases and storage jars. Then with the decorative cork lid as a closure. And always extremely decorative! The approx. 17 cm high jar was turned on the wheel from French porcelain and is hand-painted. Lisa paints with a brush or draws and carves delicate lines into the jar with pens and tools. She leaves space and movement in the drawing. Repetition and rhythm. The vessel, the light-colored porcelain, serves as a surface, a canvas. Each of these porcelain vessels is unique.
Production process: The porcelain vessel is turned on the potter's wheel. Lisa Rosemann produces her eye-catching glazes herself. The ceramics are hand-painted in different shades of blue and fired twice in an electric kiln.
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Switzerland: Information regarding transportation costs to Switzerland can be found here.
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Painting forms the starting point of Lisa Rosemann's artistic career and is combined with ceramics in her works to create harmonious works of art. Her reduced porcelain and stoneware vessels serve as a canvas for fascinating compositions of color and form.
Lisa Rosemann was born in Bückeburg in 1987 and has lived in Bremen as a freelance ceramicist since 2021. Her artistic career began in 2007 when she studied fine art at the HfBK Hamburg. She then continued her education at the University of Münster and completed a diploma in free painting at the KuAk Münster under Henk Vish.
From 2015 to 2017, she gained practical experience in various workshops in France, Spain and Portugal. She then spent nine months with ceramist Micki Schloessingk in Wales before completing her training in ceramics with Frauke Alber in Bremen from 2018 to 2020.
The artist herself writes: "Inspired by working in various ceramic workshops in Europe, my previous studies in fine art and my training as a ceramicist, my work brings together different styles, experiences and inspirations. I like to combine and try out the material clay. To draw, paint and scratch on the white porcelain surface. New every time. And always different."