Maria De Haan
Maria De Haan is a British/Spanish ceramicist celebrated for her signature smoke-fired vessels and contemporary forms. Inspired by natural shapes and textures, particularly those found underwater, her creations are emotive, elegant, and striking. De Haan discovered clay in 2005, training with master potters Simon Leach and Anna Silverton. After a two-year residency with artist Mike Goddard on the island of Bequia in the West Indies, De Haan established a thriving ceramics studio in London.
In 2015, she relocated to Mallorca, continuing her studio practice and experimenting with techniques, including her now-signature smoke-fired pieces.
De Haan’s work has been exhibited and appeared in books and magazines internationally. It continues to gain momentum, with collectors admiring her piece’s quiet power and depth.
She is equally dedicated to teaching the craft to others. Since 2017, she’s held workshops in her mountain studio, introducing a new generation of makers to clay. De Haan Gallery/Studio is an organic progression of her vision – a dual-focused centre dedicated to teaching and exhibiting contemporary ceramics.
Hüseyin Artik
Hüseyin Artik is an artist and potter from Bursa, Turkey, who's gained an international reputation for his exquisite bottle forms and unique pieces. He specializes in tableware ranges and creates individually designed collections in collaboration with global brands. Artik's work is characterized by minimalism and monochromatic tones, featuring clean, crisp lines and measured proportions. He currently focuses exclusively on porcelain, pushing the material to its limits with intricate large-scale bottles and elegantly curvaceous bowls.
Mandy Pang
Mandy is a ceramic artist whose practice draws on her Chinese heritage and London identity.
Born in London, her work is informed by the rituals, histories, and philosophies of Asian culture, translated into contemporary forms and sensibilities.
She began working with clay during an artist residency in Jingdezhen, the porcelain capital of China, where she engaged deeply with the material’s cultural and historical lineage. Her studies later continued in Japan under the guidance of a 12th-generation master potter, where she trained within a traditional Japanese ceramic practice.
Mandy’s work is guided by a pursuit of balance, harmony, and restraint, and by a respect for clay in its most essential state. Her practice is rooted in the ceremonial traditions of tea (cha-do), incense (kō-dō), and flowers (ikebana). She also works with kintsugi, embracing repair as both a sustainable act and an aesthetic philosophy that honours imperfection.
Lena Harms
Lena Konstanze Harms (b. 1988, Munich) is a ceramic artist with a background in product design. For over seven years, she has worked primarily with hand-building techniques—coil and slab—eschewing mass production in favor of a slow, deliberate process. Her practice centers around the Japanese Nerikomi method, layering and inlaying colored clays to create intricate patterns. Each vessel, even functional forms like cups, becomes a unique, painterly composition.
Deeply inspired by nature’s textures, colors, and contrasts—as well as traditional craft practices from around the world—Harms explores themes of identity, belonging, and the longing for a life more rooted in the natural world. Her work is a response to the pace of contemporary life, offering a tactile and meditative alternative through quiet, intentional making.
She currently lives and works in Munich.
Marco Minetti
Marco Minetti is an artist creating work from native clays, ashes, and foraged materials. Based in California and Korea, he draws significant influence from ancient East Asian philosophies and practices. Minetti spent five years in Korea, immersing himself in intricate “onggi” techniques used to build large fermentation vessels, studying under master potter Kwak Kyung Tae. He also learnt the art of “buncheong,” a type of slipware from rural Korea, which remains a strong element in his work. His creations reflect upon the synergy between humans and nature, manifesting the unpredictable interactions between clay and fire.
Yasha Butler
Yasha Butler is a Turkish ceramic sculptor based in Ireland, and Istanbul, Turkey. She creates minimalist ceramic artwork that draws inspiration from nature, antiquity, and the beauty of life's imperfections. Butler has lived and worked around the globe, studying ceramics, participating in residencies, and opening studios in the United States and her native Istanbul. Her work has been exhibited in galleries throughout the United States, Europe, and Turkey.
Sarah Jerath
Sarah Jerath is an artist from the Uk. Her organic forms are influenced by ancient primitive pottery, resonating with a song and rhythm that echo the elemental aspects of nature. Jerath utilizes natural materials, such as tree ash and minerals, to produce works that exhibit a simple and organic aesthetic.