Three-Piece Interactive Nesting Porcelain Sculpture
This three-piece sculpture was thrown on the wheel then carved out. I is quite intriguing to look at and would make an interesting focal point on a desk or sideboard. you can turn the inside sculptures in different ways and get a different effect. You can stack and unstack them. I see a set of masks from Africa with a hint of Picasso’s cubist perdiod, or possibly Samurai helmets or even an evocation of Darth Vador in triplicate. Whatever you see in them, they will be sure to attract your attention and make your guests talk. You can also put a fairy light inside at night to create unsettling shadows. All pieces were glazed and fired at cone 10 (over 2300 degrees F or 1200 degrees C). The smallest one is about 3 X2 1/2X2 1/2 inches, the medium one is 4X3X3 inches and the bigger one is 5 inches tall and about 4 1/2 inches wide and deep.
Note: the middle piece’s glaze ran a bit and I had to grind some of it off the piece. You can see on the pictures the two/three places at the bottom of the piece that are bloated. It’s not sharp since it was ground down, but it’s not a perfect finish
This three-piece sculpture was thrown on the wheel then carved out. I is quite intriguing to look at and would make an interesting focal point on a desk or sideboard. you can turn the inside sculptures in different ways and get a different effect. You can stack and unstack them. I see a set of masks from Africa with a hint of Picasso’s cubist perdiod, or possibly Samurai helmets or even an evocation of Darth Vador in triplicate. Whatever you see in them, they will be sure to attract your attention and make your guests talk. You can also put a fairy light inside at night to create unsettling shadows. All pieces were glazed and fired at cone 10 (over 2300 degrees F or 1200 degrees C). The smallest one is about 3 X2 1/2X2 1/2 inches, the medium one is 4X3X3 inches and the bigger one is 5 inches tall and about 4 1/2 inches wide and deep.
Note: the middle piece’s glaze ran a bit and I had to grind some of it off the piece. You can see on the pictures the two/three places at the bottom of the piece that are bloated. It’s not sharp since it was ground down, but it’s not a perfect finish
This three-piece sculpture was thrown on the wheel then carved out. I is quite intriguing to look at and would make an interesting focal point on a desk or sideboard. you can turn the inside sculptures in different ways and get a different effect. You can stack and unstack them. I see a set of masks from Africa with a hint of Picasso’s cubist perdiod, or possibly Samurai helmets or even an evocation of Darth Vador in triplicate. Whatever you see in them, they will be sure to attract your attention and make your guests talk. You can also put a fairy light inside at night to create unsettling shadows. All pieces were glazed and fired at cone 10 (over 2300 degrees F or 1200 degrees C). The smallest one is about 3 X2 1/2X2 1/2 inches, the medium one is 4X3X3 inches and the bigger one is 5 inches tall and about 4 1/2 inches wide and deep.
Note: the middle piece’s glaze ran a bit and I had to grind some of it off the piece. You can see on the pictures the two/three places at the bottom of the piece that are bloated. It’s not sharp since it was ground down, but it’s not a perfect finish