Faceted Table
shown with ian petrie planter
shown with ian petrie planter
Faceted Table
shown with ian petrie planter

Faceted Table

Ceramic Side Table (ID: A93066)
Designed by Larry Halvorsen
$980
$980 $980 /
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Hand-built stoneware side table with surface carving. The table is built upside down and the facets are created during construction. Once the clay has dried to leather-hard consistency, the facets are refined and surface carving is completed. The piece is coated with black glaze, and when dry enough to handle, the patterned decoration is etched in the surface using the technique known as sgraffito: carving through the glaze to reveal the white clay beneath. Each piece is unique and will vary.
  • Suitable for outdoor use
  • Outdoor temperature range: 0°-1000° F
  • Matte finish
  • Ceramic: fired at cone 6, vitrified
  • Signed by the artist
  • Materials: Stoneware
This piece can be displayed outdoors year-round in mild climates only. In colder climates, bring indoors during winter to avoid damage due to freezing temperatures.
  • Shipping Charges are calculated for standard delivery to a single address within the contiguous USA and based on original prices, before discounts.
  • You may return or exchange any item within 14 days of receiving it (except for final sale items, ornament gift boxes, and custom orders). Learn More.
Larry Halvorsen

Larry Halvorsen

Larry Halvorsen Ceramics
"My drive is the creation of the work—the new and undiscovered ideas."

Larry Halvorsen works with stoneware clay, constructing his pieces through a combination of hand-building techniques such as coiling, press-and-slump molding, and slab building. He coats the pieces with black slip, and then, using the ancient technique of sgraffito, he carves through the slip, revealing the natural clay beneath. His pieces are fired once to cone 10 (2300 degrees) in a natural gas kiln.

Halvorsen's influences range from ancient stone tools, ritual objects, and Celtic monoliths to the wondrous variety of form and pattern in nature. He was also influenced by the two years he spent in the Peace Corps in Central America, where he saw Pre-Colombian pottery, the Mayan sites of Tikal and Copan, and the highlands of Guatemala.

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