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    Embroidered Ceramic Vessels by Caroline Harrius Merge Disparate Crafts

    All images courtesy of Caroline Harrius, shared with permission

    Embroidered Ceramic Vessels by Caroline Harrius Merge Disparate Crafts

    January 7, 2025

    ArtCraft

    Kate Mothes

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    Through tiny holes puncturing hand-shaped vessels, Stockholm-based artist Caroline Harrius (previously) embroiders delicate designs. She merges two distinct crafts—ceramics and fiber art—that don’t typically share much in common, exploring relationships between form and function, decoration and utility, and historically gendered artisanal practices.

    Harrius opens a solo show this month titled Blue Memories at Kaolin in Stockholm, the culmination of a three-month residency she undertook in Porsgrunn, Norway, after being awarded the municipality’s porcelain grant. The program comprises a collaborative effort between the local porcelain factory and Kunsthall Grenland to support contemporary artistry in the material.

    “The meeting between textile and ceramics is irrational and full of resistance,” Harrius says in a statement for the exhibition. She spent time at the Porsgruns Porcelain Factory with free reign to expand on existing ideas and apply new inspiration.

    “Next to the workshop was an antique dealer with rows of boxes marked ’10 SEK for everything!,’ filled with objects,” she says. From these trinkets, which the dealer had deemed practically worthless, Harrius imagined new floral designs.

    “I embroider in porcelain with cotton thread in an attempt to recontextualize the crafts,” she says. “I want to make an attempt to highlight all the precious and impressive craft objects that are often left behind within the walls of the home, continue to challenge hierarchies in the field, and make visible traditional female craftsmanship.”

    Blue Memories runs from January 11 to 26. See more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

    Photo by Alexander Beveridge

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    Yumi Okita’s Butterflies and Botanicals Metamorphose from Colorful Thread

    Yumi Okita’s Butterflies and Botanicals Metamorphose from Colorful Thread

    December 2, 2024

    ArtCraftNature

    Kate Mothes

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    From vibrant thread and wire, Yumi Okita conjures thrillingly lifelike moths, butterflies, and flowers. The Raleigh-based artist (previously) meticulously embroiders insects’ colorful wings with an eye for realism, so until you’re up close, they appear as though they could flutter away at any moment. And in her more recent series of otherworldly botanicals, petals, leaves, and roots curl to look as though they were just plucked from their habitats.

    Okita often adds original sculptures to her Etsy shop, and you can also follow updates on Instagram.

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