Browse through to see the exhibitors we have here and access their websites. (Best viewed on a tablet, laptop or desktop computer).
Raku fired, thrown pieces. Each pot is an individual, with an exciting surface decoration that can never quite be repeated.
Adam Keeling is an earthenware potter following in the footsteps of generations of country potters making fluid, functional slipware.
Individually hand carved encaustic, inlaid tiles with inspiring poetry, quotes and images using ancient 13th Century techniques held eternally in earth and time.
From my Dartmoor studio, I craft saggar fired vessels and tableware, blending traditional techniques, wild clay slips and natural materials.
Traditional Kurinuki carvings with a modern twist. Carved in toasted stoneware clay, and glazed with a natural and metallic palette.
Anna works with stoneware and porcelain clay to create sculptural work ranging from figurative sculptural works to remotely functional vessels.
Narrative painterly slipware capturing the British coast with rum cups, vessels and generous platters featuring ships, harbours and stormy seas.
Narrative painterly slipware capturing the British coast with rum cups, vessels and generous platters featuring ships, harbours and stormy seas.
After a career in performance arts at higher education, I now concentrate on developing some drama or action with clay. My work still focuses on social interaction and human movement but now the medium is porcelain, mostly wheel-thrown vessels.
Wheel-thrown and hand-decorated porcelain pots, made with precision and conveying a love for early to mid-20th century European ceramics.
Finely thrown porcelain and stoneware vessels, evoking distant landscapes.
Hand-built figurative ceramics based loosely around the head and face.
My work is mostly thrown Porcelain. I fire to stoneware and mix all my own glazes and colours.
My work resides at the intersection of form and function, a symbiosis between functional and sculptural where utilitarian objects take on an artistic identity rooted in the natural world.
Emotive, Sgraffito illustrated, hand built ceramic pieces exploring narratives influenced by Greek mythology created for the 21st century.
Hand made and hand built, cast and altered animal sculpture in raku and earthenware.
Hand thrown raku fired copper matt and glazed ceramics. Elegant forms, vibrant colours on a selection of bottles, bowls and lidded pots.
Individual hand-coiled pod-like vessels capturing the quiet beauty, patina and colours of aged and weathered rocks and stone.
The two strands of Clare’s work – slab-built sculptures and wheel-thrown sculptural vessels – explore themes of emotional impact.
Thrown and hand built sculptural pieces inspired by the sea.
Real flower imprints in Earthenware clay, each piece hand painted, depicting the changing seasons of the Somerset countryside.
3 dimensional vessel form paintings made using an experimental approach to a range of ceramic materials that evoke the feeling of place, landscape and flow of time.
Hand-built figurative porcelain and vessels, inspired by myth and history. Informed by touch to reveal the qualities of clay.
Wheel thrown porcelain working to purity of form and line to enhance the beauty of the clay.
Innovating raku ceramics and sculptures for contemporary interior decors.
Contemporary sculptures featuring contrasting textures of fine unglazed porcelain, rough organic glazes and metallic details.
One of a kind figurative sculptures, goddesses, large narrative sgraffito ware, and decorative, functional vessels. Stoneware and porcelain, incorporating found natural materials and wild clay.
Wheel thrown ceramic objects stoneware, decorated in a rhythm of slips, and glaze with a touch of gold lustre.
Hand built textural stoneware, using coloured printed slips and white glaze with punctures or raised textures that reference the aesthetic of derelict industrial landscapes.
Porcelain Lamps, Wall Panels and Vases featuring relief casts of Flowers, Grasses, Thistles, Buds and Ferns.
Hand built ceramics items suitable for interior décor, with an emphasis on bringing elements from the outside world into the home.
Eren Armitage is a ceramicist working with stoneware in Harrogate, United Kingdom. From Yokohama, Japan. Inspired by the surrounding nature of the Yorkshire Dales. The pieces intertwine her Japanese heritage with the English countryside. The vessels are wheel thrown and often hand carved, which are designed to reconnect with nature in everyday life.
Award-winning internationally acclaimed contemporary figurative ceramic sculptor who merges nature and the human form. Creating queer, hybrid, emotive sculptures.
Fiona’s sculptural and functional creations play with bold forms and geological processes, swirling with blended colours and clays.
Porcelain, thrown and sometimes altered. Each piece is painted freehand with expressive brush strokes in abstract designs.
The inspiration for Gin’s ceramic work stems from storytelling and concepts of animals in culture.
Frostproof stoneware planters and panels. Press moulded and hand built. Rich textures carried on subtle forms.
Slab built forms, dishes and wall panels. The aim is to balance form and decoration multiple firings to refine surface and colours.
Wheel thrown functional pieces, incorporating local materials such as rocks, plants and clay, Wood fired.
Ceramics with a different flavour. I am not knowingly influenced by others. I just go my own way and create what comes out of my head.
Ceramic wildlife sculpture inspired the phenomena of the natural world with lustre and porcelain embellishments.
Tactile porcelain vessels made using the combination of hand building and slip casting, focusing on in-built nerikomi design without surface decoration.
High fired slip decorated Earthenware in rich translucent colourful glazes (blues, green and turquoises). Monochrome designs also available in black and white commissioned by the British Library and new speckle glazes inspired by the Isle of Wight coastline.
These coiled stoneware planters and pots tell joyful stories. The surface is sgraffito, coloured slips, oxides, glazes and sometimes lustres.
Abstract sculpture inspired by landscape and the built environment, and trompe l'oeil sculptures such as bags and shoes. All work is hand built in stoneware.
My creativity is driven by a passion for colour, shape and strong visual impression of momentum, inspired by tango dance.
Country inspired stoneware pottery, principally salt or ash glazed and at its best accompanied by good food and drink.
Salt glazed domestic ceramics with a focus on teapots featuring open handles together with bottles and lidded jars and boxes.
Wheel thrown porcelain bowls, vases and tall forms decorated with raised textural surfaces. Also hand built tubular sculptural vessels.
Wheel thrown porcelain and naked raku fired ceramics with a mid century aesthetic.
Thrown and altered stoneware. Wrekin rock inclusions with local clays and wood ash produce layered lava glazes, reflecting the volcanic origins.
My work is mainly for the home, to be used daily. It is high fired in a wood kiln using soda vapour, enhanced by the natural flame, to create the glaze. For texture and decoration I use a palette of local clays and different wood ashes.
Wildlife sculptures mainly based on endangered species. Fired to 1160c and finished in acrylics.
Julie presents a body of work shaped by living alongside the Thames Estuary. Hand-built stoneware celebrating the tactile.
My work balances form and function, contrasting textures through burnishing, carving, and glazing, bridging utility and sculptural beauty.
Hand built ceramics using a variety of techniques. Highly decorative, organic and functional pieces inspired by life on the Blackdown hills.
Delicate porcelain blended with the beauty and simplicity of origami. Stunning geometric sculptures that play with light and shadow.
Katharine specialises in all forms of decorative and functional ware, from full dinner services to unique ornamental bowls and elegant vases.
With a playfulness that starts in her sketchbook, the gentle, enigmatic humour of Katherine’s work quietly asks you to ponder.
I hand-build ceramics inspired by my time spent in nature, using texture, mark making and colour.
Hand-built, smoke fired ceramics inspired by the interplay of contrasts found within nature.
Slab formed contemporary ceramics created from black clay and impressed with found objects. Complemented by a range of ceramic jewellery.
Distinctive wheel thrown and hand painted ceramics in porcelain and stoneware.
Delicate, translucent parian vessels and sculpture inspired by light, landscape and the organic structure of plant life, provoking feelings of optimism.
Lush and softly rippled thrown porcelain tableware, in the colours of the Mediterranean.
Liz Watts Individual and unique vessels and sculptures primarily in porcelain, often very colourful and overglaze decorated with gold, platinum and metal lustres.
I throw my work on the wheel and decorate by hand painting and sgraffito. My work is inspired by traditional tattooing, Slavic folklore and a maximalist taste in decoration!
Original ceramic sculptures, combining my love for both clay and psychology through the exploration of vulnerability, human emotions and experiences.
Pared-back, modern rustic wheel-thrown tableware with hand-made glazes in a gentle palette with pops of colour and lovely textures.
Unglazed stoneware sculpture rooted in the human subconscious and the ancient history and materials of London, its place of creation.
Handmade animals and figures inspired by the circus, mythology, fairytale and at active imagination.
Marika creates intricate, hand-built sculptural ceramics that celebrate the whimsical and the quirky. Drawing inspiration from playful birds, enchanting toadstools, and her journey of resilience, her work radiates positivity and hope. Each piece reflects her joyful outlook on life, shaped by her ability to overcome deep sorrows, and aims to inspire others through vibrant colours, delightful textures, and symbolic depth.
Unique vessels evoking memories of landscapes and imagined worlds; rich colours and surface reliefs provide visual and tactile responses.
Wheel thrown stoneware pottery, informed by Korean ceramics and inspired by textile pattern and the natural world.
Meg creates multilayered textural wall pieces, incorporating geometric forms and figurative sculptural works in stoneware and parian ceramics.
My work is functional and decorative, wheel thrown in red and black earthenware clays. My work usually involves slip-trailing, sgraffito, and carving.
Hand-built stoneware vessels and wall panels inspired by landscape and coastline. Carving, layering slips and glazes create the textural surfaces.
My work is an attempt to communicate a meaningful connection with the natural world through a joyful expression of form, texture and pattern in clay. I like to play with scale and context, providing interesting interplay between the known and unfamiliar. Pieces are a combination of thrown and altered, hand built and textured clay, multiple fired and stoneware glazed.
Black stoneware coil built, slab built or cast in handmade moulds. Minimally glazed on the outside, celebrating the clay itself.
Neville makes functional Slipware pottery that is raw fired to earthenware temperatures. The materials and techniques used remain visible, often with the warmth of the terracotta clay showing through the glaze or left bare, creating a textural contrast between the raw and glazed surfaces.
London based ceramicist Hanna Salomonsson makes sculptural stoneware pieces inspired by Scandinavian landscapes and Swedish folklore.
Flora works on the wheel and fires her work in an electric kiln, often showcasing wood-ash glazes and wild clays.
Abstract ceramic art inspired by stories of women and made using a combination of collage, clay and printing processes.
Painterly wheel-thrown ceramics influenced by abstract expression and inspired by images that are abstracted by darkness and animated by shadows.
Paul’s work focuses on the simplicity the raw material, revealing the natural beauty and refinement of the clay body. There is a purity to the forms that are often dissected and reassembled creating movement and seams running through the work.
Thrown and altered stoneware vessels with atmospheric glazes, inspired by landscapes.
Salt glazed porcelain and stoneware, thrown and finished on the wheel, sometimes altered and assembled, including functional as well as one-off pieces.
By building up layers of textured clay combined with burnishing and polishing of surfaces, I try to achieve opposites of rough and smooth.
Hand built sculptural and functional stoneware. Contrasts between heavy grogged texture, the controlled added sprigged or printed decoration and the vibrant or smooth pastel interiors.
Phoebe makes unique one of a kind homewares and small batch produced tableware, marrying perfect function with elegant design.
Wheel-thrown stoneware by Catherine and Matt West. Specialising in domestic ware fired both in gas and electric kilns.
A range of affordable tableware for daily use. Sculpted planters for the garden and one-off pieces individually decorated.
Richard Baxter creates distinctive brightly coloured pieces from hand thrown fine porcelain. Pottery to enjoy.
My pots reflect the spontaneity of the slipware tradition of decoration, with coloured clays called slips on semi-dry pots. Using terracotta clay as the main body of work, then dipped in white slip, colours are applied in different ways, with brushes, sponges and trailers, gradually building bold patterns around the pots for a loose abstract effect.
Rob specialises in hand-thrown raku fired ceramics, including large-scale studio art pots applying tracking and burnishing techniques, as well as elegant tableware. His work is inspired by rustic machinery and colours from his rural olive farm.
Hand built functional and sculptural work inspired by the Jurassic Coast.
Hand built small, medium and large stoneware pieces, both functional and sculptural, equally suitable for indoors and outside.
Dan’s work combines a love for the power and majesty of the sea with thrown forms with clean crisp decoration.
Sara creates hand-built ceramic sculpture inspired by wildlife and the natural world, exploring textural and wabi-sabi qualities of clay.
Ceramic sculpture and functional ware celebrating neurodiversity and acceptance of it for a more united accepting society.
Vibrant, sculptural ceramics that evoke joy and inspire reflection, designed for both indoor and outdoor spaces.
Sharon Griffin sculpts the figure and the face, capturing the essence of the universal human condition in its rawest sense.
Functional thrown and hand built black earthenware. Surfaces decorated with free pencil line drawings exploring repetitive patterns or suggestions of flowers.
Bright, bold brushstrokes in vibrant colours are the hallmark of Val Shelton’s painting on Ken’s finely thrown bowls and vases.
Thrown ceramics from the heart. High fire stoneware with beautiful, simple, glazes and exciting fluid textures.
Unique impressionistic wildlife sculptures capturing the true essence of British birds and animals. Simon's work is fired to stoneware temperatures and suitable for garden or interior display.
Sculptural vessels described as contemplative in their referencing of rite and ritual. Use of grogs and additives to produce highly textured surfaces that are contrasted with glazes and stains.
Ceramic vessels embodying the beauty of landscape, earth and tree formations. Mixed clays, wild clay slips and woven wire.
Hand-thrown tableware glazed in muted pastel tones with a focus on functionality and beauty.
Thrown porcelain vessels exploring contrasts of light and dark, stillness and movement. Individual pieces or in sets, creating expansive landscapes.
I explore clay’s tactile nature through digital transitions, blending pop culture satire and craftsmanship to create thought-provoking, humorous ceramics.
Studio Skellett sculptures are not merely artistic creations, they are a reflection, a mirror where the boundaries of reality and reflection merge, inviting viewers to contemplate the enigmatic and the eternal within themselves.
Porcelain Nerikomi vessels: colour and intricate decoration infuse the clay itself, bypassing extensive brushwork decoration, conveying delicate beauty and mystery.
Hand thrown stoneware carved freehand with designs inspired by nature and the Arts and Crafts movement.
Decorative hand built ceramic vessels in a mixture of clays and inspired by texture and forms found in nature.
Porcelain vessels decorated in multiple firings using slips, glazes and precious metals.
My work is inspired by the landscapes and the archaeology of the South of France.
Photo credit: @Valerie_Bernadini
Victoria uses alternative wood firing practices with surfaces created from natural sources to evoke contemporary interpretations of ancient ceramics.
Raku both 'naked' and glazed experimenting with form and surface preparation. Stoneware vessels with multiple firings and finishes investigating where the Atlantic hits coastal land in Europe.
We specialise in crystalline glaze pottery, crafting unique pieces with mesmerizing crystal patterns that combine functionality, artistry, and natural beauty.
Ximena's colourful stoneware ceramics are a cultural fusion inspired by her Colombian roots and her natural British surroundings of the Ashdown Forest.
Seeking visual inspiration in old, time-worn buildings, Zeba creates layers of colour and texture on her wheelthrown pots.