Manufactory
Lotte Buur
  
About the object: The black vase is characterised by its striking surface texture and round shape. A thick layer of cobalt sinter engobe creates a relief texture and gives the object a lively appearance. Depending on the incidence of light, the vase appears in shades of grey, black and taupe. With a diameter of 25 cm and a height of 26 cm, it tapers both downwards and upwards towards the opening, creating a harmonious and balanced impression. The vessel has a lively presence that makes it a decorative highlight in any living space.
Manufacturing process: The black vase was made using the slab construction technique from coarse fireclay stoneware clay. The shapes are created by carefully joining and modelling the rolled-out clay slabs. The relief-like surface structure was achieved with a thick layer of cobalt sinter engobe, creating a contrasting and lively effect.
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Lotte Buur lives on the Danish island of Samsø, where she creates her unique stoneware vases. Born in 1966, the artist began her career as a printmaker and later as a graphic designer before discovering painting and sculpting in her mid-twenties.
Over the past ten years, her focus has increasingly shifted to ceramics. Today, she devotes herself almost exclusively to the production of stoneware vases, which she both throws on the potter's wheel and shapes using slab building techniques.
Lotte Buur has participated in numerous exhibitions, primarily showcasing her sculptures and paintings. More recently, she collaborated with volunteers on the large-scale land art project "Thistle Corridor." This project arose in connection with the planned Kattegat Bridge, which will connect the island of Zealand with Jutland. The project fosters community, stimulates debate, and strengthens appreciation for nature.
For Lotte Buur, nature is the starting point of her creative process and her most important source of inspiration. She therefore prefers to present her vases in her idyllic garden, surrounded by blossoms and leaves.