Mud, Water, and Heat Combine to Add Tactile Beauty to Terracotta Collection

Mud, Water, and Heat Combine to Add Tactile Beauty to Terracotta Collection

Australian New Volumes’ approach to furnishings and objects could be surmised to be one in response to the diminishing presence of the natural, textural, and the imperfect – designs defined by a materiality serving modern living innately attuned to the earthly elements. The brand’s terrestrial aesthetic and ethos is in full display with the brand’s follow-up collection dedicated to various applications of baked clay, aka terracotta, for seating, lighting, entertaining, and display.

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Two robust terracotta tables featuring a revolving carousel of voids and ribbed Greco-Roman style design paired with a terracotta armchair set across a cloth drop cloth.

The form of Echo Low (above), Cove chair (center), and Echo High (right) by Thomas Coward reference classical Greco-Roman architecture realized in clay rather than marble.

The Pitcher Table and two Pitcher Stool by Adam Goodrum set across a fabric tarp and with table topped with small terracotta planter.

The Pitcher Table and Pitcher Stool by Adam Goodrum are sculpturally simple forms with just enough sharp angularity to keep the design contemporary.

A sequel to the brand’s first collection represented by objects made from 250-million-year-old Elba stone, the Collection 02—Terracotta is a more humble material and one described by New Volumes’ Creative Director Thomas Coward as “stories made from the mud.” The combination of clay mud with water aided by heat and time impart terracotta with its distinctive color and texture, a material that’s possibly the world’s first manufactured medium. Put to varied use by a small group of designers invited to interpret the traditional clay, the eight-piece collection takes on forms both recognizable and experimental at once.

A simple, patterned trio of terracotta vessels, each measuring around 600mm in length, based on a bark coolamon and water carrier.

Earth Wirri by Lucy Simpson was inspired by the form bark coolamons, water carriers, and other Australian Aboriginal designs.

A simple, elongated wall light, offered in two lengths – 400mm and 900mm with a linear shield-like form characterized by a central sharp line or ‘pinch’ that allows light to fall differently on each side of the terracotta.

The linear Pinch wall lamp designed by Kate Stokes is both lighting and wall sculpture characterized by a central sharp line or ‘pinch’ that allows light to fall differently on each side of the terracotta form.

A simple, elongated wall light, offered in two lengths – 400mm and 900mm with a linear shield-like form characterized by a central sharp line or ‘pinch’ that allows light to fall differently on each side of the terracotta.

Pinch wall lamp by Kate Stokes

A curvaceous terracotta form inspired by the at-times weird and wonderful shape of flowers.

The curvaceous Sol by Hattie Molloy was shaped to stoke curiosity and provide adaptable display opportunities for flowers or incense with its quartet of bulbous protrusions.

A free-flowing umbrella holder, inspiredby the ribbed oil and water jars of Greece. The three-part, compartment-like form is tapered for stability and form-ribbed for strength. Included in the range is a smaller vase version, along with a fruit platter with a ribbed base, designed to allow fruit to breathe.

Designer Chris Connell borrows the Greek word ‘Skafos’ meaning “vessel” to communicate the purpose of this contemporary umbrella holder and smaller vase.

A modular design consisting of five individual pieces that can be combined to create a tabletop sprout planter or used alone or in different combinations as a cake stand, serving plates, a dinner set or colander.

Megan Morton’s Harvest is a creation of multitudes: multipurpose, multiple of pieces, and a multitude of configurations.

Applied across various forms – seats, side tables, stools, vases, and even a sculptural modular colander set – the New Volumes Collection 02—Terracotta would not look out of place within the Arcological settings of Paolo Soleri’s Arcosanti (or perhaps as set pieces in the next season of Andor), tinged sumptuously by Australian mineral mud and shaped wearing the telltale signs of its creators.

A terracotta arm chairs against a white floor.

“The designers who took part in this collection are as diverse as the products they have created. From established names to exciting new faces, all possess a fiercely individual approach and style, and have taken to the material with gusto,” notes New Volumes Creative Lead, Thomas Coward.

Two terracotta arm chairs set across a drape of drop cloth.

Thomas Cowards’ Cove chair highlights the strength of terracotta and its organic beauty.

A terracotta fruit platter with a ribbed base, designed to allow fruit to breathe.

The Skafos fruit platter by Chris Connell reaches out in three directions, with a ribbed base designed to elevate fruit allowing each piece to breathe.

The contemporary exploration of classical forms celebrating terracotta operates in stark contrast to the increasingly manufactured artifice of modernity. Whether admired separately or in sum, New Volumes’ Collection 02— Terracotta is a reminder why we are naturally drawn to play and shape mud as children, a medium that can be manipulated with abandon by hands young and old alike.

To view the entire collection and learn more about the Collection 02— Terracotta, venture over to newvolumes.com.

Source: design-milk

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