Landscapes

Work by: Chiara Della Cava, Photo by: Kirstine Autzen
Name
Chiara Della Cava
Education degree
Professionsbachelor
Fagfelt
Design
Institute
Architecture and Design
Program
Crafts in Glass and Ceramics
Year
2023

For my bachelor project, I take a quintessentially functional form, the plate, and reframe it within the context of the museum wall. Though simple in design, this series holds layers of meaning and memory that speak to my making process.

When I create, I entertain a dialogue between myself, the elements, and tradition. As I mold and shape the clay I seek to pay homage to the echoes of heritage that precede me. The traditional form of the plate, rooted in its utilitarian purpose and cultural significance, becomes the canvas on which this dialogue unfolds.

With its centuries-old history, wood firing further speaks to the collaboration between the elements and the maker. In this project, the wood kiln is a crucible of transformation where slip, glaze, fire, ash, and soda work together to create painterly surfaces fused onto the clay. This illusion of depth invites viewers to explore the hidden landscapes of movements and colors captured within each piece. As these plates hang together on the wall, they initiate a discourse among themselves and their surroundings.

Through my work, I seek to honor the historical legacy of ceramics and the timeless allure of functional forms while challenging traditional expectations of the nature of ‘functional’ and encouraging reflection on the intersection of art and craft.

Process
Photos by Kirstine Autzen
Photo by Kirstine Autzen

Through the development of this project, I explore ways in which to honor the historical legacy of ceramics and the timeless allure of this form while challenging traditional expectations of the nature of ‘function’ and encouraging reflection on the intersection of art and craft. It is in this overlap between disciplines that I have developed an installation of pieces that blend the lines of design and art, workmanship and expression, function and ambiguity, familiar and unexpected.

Final Work

“By being both thing and representation of thing, that craft has created its own space. By being used – in daily life as well as in a museum or exhibition, as a usable thing, as a social symbol and an art object – it becomes an expression of its own time.”

                             - J. Veiteberg, Ceramics: Art and Perceptino No. 53, p. 67

Photo by Kirstine Autzen
Photo by Kirstine Autzen
Photo by Kirstine Autzen
Photo by Kirstine Autzen

The Royal Danish Academy supports the Sustainable Development Goals

Since 2017 the Royal Danish Academy has worked with the Sustainable Development Goals. This is reflected in our research, our teaching and in our students’ projects. This project relates to the following UN goal(-s)