Joanne Cox

Joanne Cox Jeweller

Joanne graduated in 2004 from the North Wales School of Art and Design with a BA Hons in Applied Arts.  Since graduating she has set up a studio in Cheshire. Working on her range of anodised aluminium jewellery, she is inspired by colours and patterns found in nature.  She takes images of flora and fauna which are the starting point of her design process.  The textures, patterns and structures inform the materials which she selects for printing onto the metal with dyes and inks.  A chosen palette of subtle or vibrant background dyes and then applied and mixed freely on the surface, the hues, tones and blends created make each piece unique.

Skeleton leaves, insect wings, tree bark, peacock feathers and the silhouette of winter tree branches against sunsets feature in my recent work.  Each piece is hand printed, dyed and crafted by me in my studio.

Join the Email List

Stay up to date on our latest News & Events

Willie Carter

Willie Carter Ceramicist/Potter

Working from his workshop in Farndon, Cheshire, Willie produces an Earthenware range of thrown and hand built pieces, from egg cups to huge platters in vibrant Mediterranean colours. Over the years, a love of modelling clay has resulted in the evolution of hand built animal sculptures.

Willie has worked on several prestigious commissions, including the reconstruction of the medieval tiled floor in the Wakefield tower (H M Tower of London).

Join the Email List

Stay up to date on our latest News & Events

Wayne Clark

Wayne Clark Ceramicist/Potter

I graduated from Harrow in 1995 with a degree in workshop ceramics.  In 200 I gained an MA in Applied Arts from the North Wales School of Art and Design in Wrexham.  I am now based in Prestatyn, North Wales where I have a small workshop and an Anagama wood-kiln down on the coast.

I make work with the firing in mind, creating and making marks in the clay with the intention of catching the ash from the fire, which at sustained temperatures turns to glaze, thus pooling as it runs over the work.  Working on large sculptural pieces gives me the opportunity to be more aggressive with my marks, sometimes ripping and piercing through the work.  With smaller functional pieces I try to maintain the same aggressive impressions in a more contained manner.

Join the Email List

Stay up to date on our latest News & Events

Andrew Coomber

Andrew Coomber

Andrew Coomber,  Artist, Designer, Craftsman

Landscape has always been the primary inspiration for my work.  Man’s interaction with the land, the marks he makes on it, combined with a fascination in geology and the ‘anatomy’ of the land, have been of prime importance to me.

I am interested in the interface between engineering and nature and the resulting aesthetic tensions – awareness of the ancient forces of land formation being incised by forces controlled by man.  There are also archaeological and time based references.

Join the Email List

Stay up to date on our latest News & Events

Rebecca Parrin

Rebecca Parrin

Rebecca Parrin Ceramicist/Potter

The Clwydian Hills of Denbighshire, North Wales are the inspiration for my current work.  The constant changes that the seasons bring along with man’s presence on the landscape, since the first Iron Age forts, to modern day farming.  I am interested in the scars left on the hills by industry and by how quickly these abandoned places are ‘healed’ by nature.

Initially interested in Raku firing and the many colour variations I was able to produce, I am currently using an electric kiln and a limited colour palette of mainly oxides, believing that in my current work, less is more.

Join the Email List

Stay up to date on our latest News & Events