Aspen Branches
Aspen Branches

Aspen Branches

Ceramic Wall Sculpture (ID: A125180)
Designed by Amy Meya
$250
$250 $250 /
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Aspen branches are created from a red stoneware clay body, which is then layered with a dark brown slip and a pure white porcelain slip, the organic process in making these pieces means that each and every piece is a one of a kind. Hangs easily on the wall with a key-hole cut out on the back. Hardware provided.

Each branch is approximately 23 inches high, 3 inches wide, 3 inches deep, with the shorter branches connecting to the main stem in various lengths, and depths.
  • Matte finish
  • Ceramic: fired at cone 6
  • Signed by the artist
  • Materials: Porcelain, Stoneware
  • 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.
Amy Meya

Amy Meya

"The most important part of my work is the medium—I feel passionate about clay itself. There is something about taking a lump of mud and forming it into an object that fills a primal urge for me. "

The intimate and personal nature of ceramic objects allows Amy Meya to be expressive in a way that a 2-D medium does not. She finds that clay, as a medium that comes from nature, lends itself perfectly to depictions of nature. She takes all the forms that she finds interesting in nature (tree branches, flocks of birds, seed pods, flowers) and expresses them in clay. She hopes that a message of appreciation and conservation of nature comes across in her work. Additionally, she loves clay's deep history: clay objects more than 26,000 years old have been unearthed. Just the thought that she is working in a similar way to our ancient ancestors sparks her imagination and makes her feel connected to the human race.

All of Amy Meya's work begins as a slab of clay. From that blank canvas, she decides what form it will take. Once the shape is determined, she free-hand carves into the piece to create floral textures, leaf veins, or whatever the piece dictates the carving should be.

Meya fell in love with clay from her first introduction in kindergarten, where she made a hilltop tree holding a nest containing several tiny eggs. Taking every art course available while in high school, she moved to Europe for five years before returning to her hometown of Kansas City, Missouri, where she took several clay courses and volunteered for the non-profit KC Clay Guild.

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