Crafts CouncilDirectoryLaura Lee CeramicsCeramicistLincolnshire, EnglandCeramicsWebsiteE-mailInstagramAboutInfoSustainabilityLaura Lee graduated in 2024 with a First-Class BA(Hons)Fine Arts & Crafts having specialised in ceramics from Hull University. Her wheel-thrown ceramic pieces are inspired by the fragile beauty of the forest, highlighting the recent devastation of forests caused by wildfires due to climate change. Focusing on the raku firing method captures the strength and resilience of nature. Since graduating Laura has gained gallery representation across the Yorkshire region.Focus:I wheel-throw my ceramic pieces and glaze using the raku firing techniques. I aim to balance the atheistic beauty with a strong conceptual message to my artwork. Laura Lees Studio are located in the beautiful Hall Farm Gardens in Lincolnshire where she works alongside other creatives. She makes good use of their waste, recycling steel from the blacksmith to add to her ceramic sculptures .The wood cut-offs supplied by the sculptor and furniture maker have allowed for experimentation with various combustibles for her raku firing process. Flower clippings from the gardens have given her extraordinary outcomes of metallic translucent glazes. AboutLaura Lee graduated in 2024 with a First-Class BA(Hons)Fine Arts & Crafts having specialised in ceramics from Hull University. Her wheel-thrown ceramic pieces are inspired by the fragile beauty of the forest, highlighting the recent devastation of forests caused by wildfires due to climate change. Focusing on the raku firing method captures the strength and resilience of nature. Since graduating Laura has gained gallery representation across the Yorkshire region.InfoFocus:I wheel-throw my ceramic pieces and glaze using the raku firing techniques. I aim to balance the atheistic beauty with a strong conceptual message to my artwork. SustainabilityLaura Lees Studio are located in the beautiful Hall Farm Gardens in Lincolnshire where she works alongside other creatives. She makes good use of their waste, recycling steel from the blacksmith to add to her ceramic sculptures .The wood cut-offs supplied by the sculptor and furniture maker have allowed for experimentation with various combustibles for her raku firing process. Flower clippings from the gardens have given her extraordinary outcomes of metallic translucent glazes. WebsiteE-mailInstagramProjectUrns of the ForestProjectBurnt Forest RebornProjectBurnt Forest RebornProjectBurnt Forest RebornProjectBurnt Forest RebornProjectRegrowth