Haven wall object
Photo credit: Anne Deppe

The Haven Wall Luminaires: A Porcelain Lighting Collection

Header: Ana Arroyo

To mark their second participation at Maison & Objet, Schoemig Porzellan presented the new Haven wall objects, created out of a playful approach to the traditional technique of slipcasting porcelain.

Haven wall objects
Photo credit: Anne Deppe
Haven wall objects
Photo credit: Anne Deppe

Made for customisation

A selection of 10 different wall elements allows users to freely compose their systems, from widespread architectural installations to a few eye-catching ensembles for more intimate settings. With their softly shimmering gold plating in the centre and a sensuous and filigree allure, they add a poetic touch to any space.

Aurive wall sculpture
Photo credit: Schoemig Porzellan
Aurive wall sculpture
Photo credit: Schoemig Porzellan

The Haven lineup

At Maison & Objet, Schoemig Porzellan has also presented an overview of her collections that are, as well as the wall pieces, meticulously handcrafted in her Berlin atelier. For example, Haven is also offered as a dining bowl set, consisting of 5 different sizes that can be placed into each other. Each bowl may be used solitarily for food or together to create a blossom-like sculpture.

Haven sculptural set of 5 stackable bowls.
Photo credit: Ludger Paffrath

Graph and Silhouet

Highly appreciated by international chefs, the Silhouet tableware collection, with its elegant curves and subtle interplay of matte and glossy surfaces, serves as a sophisticated dining platform.

A fresh take on classic private dinnerware is the Graph service, featuring delicate hand-drawn lineatures that are permanently molten onto the soft, clean shapes.

Graph tableware collection
Graph Collection
Photo credit: Ana Arroyo
Graph bowl with hand drawing
Graph Collection
Photo credit: Nikolai Marcinowski
Silhouet tableware collection
Silhouet Collection
Photo credit: Kathrin Koschitzki

A journey since Fleuve

Originally having mastered the difficult art of hand-throwing porcelain from scratch more than two decades ago, in the Fleuve vessel collection, Claudia Schoemig has moved beyond technical perfection and gives space to the unpredictable and overflowing.

Playing with the dynamics that arise on the potter’s wheel, she finds grace and magic in the moment when escalation and control are flowing in balance. The fired “Fleuve” vessel remains, holding the unique memory of this extraordinary state.

Fleuve handthrown porcelain tumblers
Photo credit: Nikolai Marcinowski
Fleuve handtrown porcelain bowls
Photo credit: Anne Deppe
Schoemig Porzellan atelier photo
Photo credit: Sandra Rojo

Source: v2com newswire