Ceramic plates
Ash-coated clay plate, handmade in Mallorca
Origin | Material | Manufacturing time |
Ibiza | Stoneware and grog | 3 days |
Originally we intended for these plates to be accompanied by our dear escudelles, however we found them to be so charming we've decided they also deserve to be in the limelight as crockery in its own right.
Joan Pere, the Majorcan potter responsible for creating these tiny objects of daily art, employs grog (already baked and ground) and a larger than usual quantity of fire-clay.
"This mixture stops the pieces from being too fragile so they can be used every day." His coatings are also handmade with ash from local pinewood. The tiny specks of ash decorate the design almost like tiny flowers and if you are fortunate enough, you may find a tiny glint of blue cobalt which has sneaked its way into the baking period (some 36 hours). "I keep the ashes generated by the Anagama kiln to use them as coating."
These are not to be saved for special occasions. You can take pleasure in using them every day. They are dishwasher-friendly but not suitable for microwave.
Measurements: 24 cm. diameter aprox.
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Joan Pere inherited the trade of potter from his mother. Inspired by Japanese philosophy he decided to add a more artistic aspect to his work whilst still using practical ceramic. "I don’t think it is necessary to create specific exhibition pieces to determine art. Art can be present in everyday objects."
When he arrived at the Majorca School of Ceramics he became fascinated by fire and started to sell his old records to buy an Anagama, a Japanese kiln (pottery oven) which enables a flame to strike directly on the piece being heated.
He enjoys working with a potter’s foot wheel because as he has to co-ordinate his hands and feet, his pieces become marked and he believes this makes them "more human". He goes to great lengths to steer away from perfection and symmetry.
For the Anagama kiln he utilizes more than a ton and a half of pinewood for fuel. Pinewood is readily available in Mallorca and thanks to its resinous nature, ideal for combustion. Heating times vary between 20 and 24 hours and can reach temperatures of 1.300º C.
Each batch produces between 80 to 100 pieces. Their originally white paste comprised of sandstone and grog adopts an irregular russet off- brown tone. As the baking period is so long, the ash melts away and disperses varnishing and waterproofing them. Joan Pere sometimes jumbles up the way they are laid out and puts other elements such as seashells among them giving them an unpredictable and unexpected finish. "I actively seek out the accident because it tells me something different about each piece."
Joan Pere likes to think that his pieces can be enjoyed with our simple daily pleasures. "A few months ago a young couple bought two of my breakfast bowls. Each one cost 50 euros. They came to pick them up in an old run-down car and I was aware that it was a lot of money to them. The fact is they wanted to celebrate breakfast together everyday and that, I just thought, was so lovely."
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Encuentra aquí la historia en español.