CREATIVE VOICES
— Patricia Perales García
Design
Fragments of memory and changing seasons are evoked in the ceramics and textile assemblages of Patricia Perales García as costume design crosses over with sculpture.
In a lull from her usual work as a clothing designer in London, Patricia Perales García, a native of Burgos, Spain, found clay. “I was searching for a way to evolve my practice and started making my own pigments and colours. I think that colour, tone and texture are what drives my work and my eye. I began by mixing chalk with pigment, painting my clay sculptures,” she says. She saw a new vein forming within her practice, treating her hand-coiled terracotta pots with the mind of an artist educated as a costume designer in Florence. Often, Perales García works with fragments – of memory and experience, tone and technique, material and form. Her pots and sculptures are sometimes subdued, mimicking the earthy hues of her home region, other times painted with an underglaze in a surreal yet intimate manner. They narrate stories from an upbringing and dreamlike snatches of memories; a ladder not to walk under, domestic scenes or textural surfaces reminiscent of fabric piled, all in a way reminiscent of the matte murals of ancient Pompeii. Relocating to Copenhagen shortly before lockdown last year, she set up her studio at home. Perhaps to grasp something tangible from the before, she rummaged through her own collection of textiles: antique kitchen towels, plant-dyed cloth, remnants of old clothing salvaged or exceptional handcraft found while traveling. She returned to the fragment as a theme, layering and hand-stitching pieces of these together in narrow strips, evocative of scrolls of parchment. “As I was walking back and forth in my apartment, each day the same, there was something beautiful in seeing these works in flux, changing as the days passed and the seasons changed,” she recalled. Painting some with rich natural pigment and powdery casein, she constructs several of these works simultaneously, striving to somehow record the passing of time. In a more abstract fashion, they chronicle particular shades of colour, impulsively imagined patterns, remembrance of textures and tactility. It is somehow befitting that these are hung from an ingenious ceramic construction of her own making, emblematic of a ceramic practice effortlessly interlaced with her textile work.
This story appears in Ark Journal VOL VI
STYLING PERNILLE VEST
PHOTOGRAPHY ANDERS SCHØNNEMANN
WORDS ALISA LARSEN
A ROOM WITH A VIEW
A diminutive wooden dwelling on stilts among forest trees focuses attention on interior details to heighten the contrast between its small scale and the vastness of nature.
CASE STUDY
— NEW FOLK
Whether using traditional or innovative materials, designers lean on the craft and expertise of former practitioners to carve, shape, mould or weave.
THE SHAPE OF LIGHT
— ARK X GUBI
In collaboration with Gubi, and to celebrate the brand’s new lighting collections, Ark Journal’s creative team produced a photo essay inspired by the Californian mid-century modern architectural style.
CREATIVE VOICES
— PATRICIA PERALES GARCÍA
DESIGN
Fragments of memory and changing seasons are evoked in the ceramics and textile assemblages of Patricia Perales García as costume design crosses over with sculpture.
In a lull from her usual work as a clothing designer in London, Patricia Perales García, a native of Burgos, Spain, found clay. “I was searching for a way to evolve my practice and started making my own pigments and colours. I think that colour, tone and texture are what drives my work and my eye. I began by mixing chalk with pigment, painting my clay sculptures,” she says. She saw a new vein forming within her practice, treating her hand-coiled terracotta pots with the mind of an artist educated as a costume designer in Florence. Often, Perales García works with fragments – of memory and experience, tone and technique, material and form. Her pots and sculptures are sometimes subdued, mimicking the earthy hues of her home region, other times painted with an underglaze in a surreal yet intimate manner. They narrate stories from an upbringing and dreamlike snatches of memories; a ladder not to walk under, domestic scenes or textural surfaces reminiscent of fabric piled, all in a way reminiscent of the matte murals of ancient Pompeii. Relocating to Copenhagen shortly before lockdown last year, she set up her studio at home. Perhaps to grasp something tangible from the before, she rummaged through her own collection of textiles: antique kitchen towels, plant-dyed cloth, remnants of old clothing salvaged or exceptional handcraft found while traveling. She returned to the fragment as a theme, layering and hand-stitching pieces of these together in narrow strips, evocative of scrolls of parchment. “As I was walking back and forth in my apartment, each day the same, there was something beautiful in seeing these works in flux, changing as the days passed and the seasons changed,” she recalled. Painting some with rich natural pigment and powdery casein, she constructs several of these works simultaneously, striving to somehow record the passing of time. In a more abstract fashion, they chronicle particular shades of colour, impulsively imagined patterns, remembrance of textures and tactility. It is somehow befitting that these are hung from an ingenious ceramic construction of her own making, emblematic of a ceramic practice effortlessly interlaced with her textile work.
This story appears in Ark Journal VOL VI