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Solitary Flowers, ‘Einsame Blumen’by Cécile Daladier


  • Flow Gallery 1 Needham Road London, England, W11 2RP United Kingdom (map)

From the 14th April 2021 we will be open by Appointment Only: Wednesdays - Saturdays 11am-6pm.
To arrange a viewing please email us at info@flowgallery.co.uk

Flow is delighted to showcase a joyous celebration of flowers by French artist Cécile Daladier. Cécile has created a collection ceramic 'Pique-Fleurs', that are inspired by Robert Schumann's subtle and poetic music vocabulary for 'Einsame Blumen'.

Solitary Flowers, ‘Einsame Blumen’ by Cécile Daladier 

4 Feb – 24 April 2021

We look forward to welcoming you to our joyous celebration of flowers by French artist Cécile Daladier. We will be showcasing a collection of Cecile’s ceramic Pique-Fleurs, that are inspired by Robert Schumann’s poetic ensemble ‘Einsame Blumen’. Schuman’s subtle and poetic music vocabulary resonates with Cecile’s relationship to flowers, clay and nature. 

Originally trained as a musician, Cécile has also worked as a landscape artist before turning her hand to making ceramics, mostly Raku fired. Her love for the botanical world has always been integral to her work. She lives and works in rural Drôme, France and devotes her time to ceramics, gardening and her passion for plants.

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Cécile Daladier’s hand-formed vessels are wood-fired in her home-made kiln and smoked with fallen leaves, herbs and dried grasses gathered from her garden. Multiple openings and punctured holes characterize her vessel forms, calle pique-fleurs, an ancient French tradition. The creation and arrangement of these holes explore her desire to give each flower their own space and to offer a new way of looking at the natural world. Cecile believes her vases are only com-plete by the placing of the picked flowers.

“I like to gather various small bouquets from the garden and bring them inside. These collections are like memories of and witnesses to the outside world. With these pickings, I create vases that allow people to make small, indoor gardens in their homes.”

Cecile’s artistic practice focuses on the rhythm in nature, plants and water. The interaction between humans and the landscape. By shifting focus to the individual flower, its placement and composition. She creates her vessels in re-sponse to the nature around her. Each collection echos the change in season.

“Ceramics is a medium that brings together water, earth and plants on a very small scale—a few flowers, a little water, in a little enamelled earth, can move us.”

Photography: LinseyRendell

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21 Objects by Ane Christensen

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29 April

Capturing Stillness, by JaeJun Lee and Hayley McCrirrick