FF Loop Sculpture 001

$333.33

A small free-form loop sculpture, hand built in March 2024 and finally fired in September 2025. The piece carries the pause between those dates—an object held in waiting, uncertain if it would survive the kiln at all.

Originally titled “why now?”, the sculpture reflects the weight of empty promises and false hopes—thoughts looping on themselves, fragile but persistent. Its survival into fired form feels fitting: a work born from doubt but made solid through time and fire.

Details

  • Approximately 5 x 6 x 5 inches

  • Stoneware, free-form looped structure

  • One of one

  • Hand wash only

Collector’s Note

This piece is offered at $333 as an early sculptural form in the archive. The number is symbolic—part of a recurring motif in my work, where “3” often marks beginnings, transitions, and thresholds.

At this scale, the work sits between functional loop cups and vases—an object that belongs to the sculptural lineage, yet carries the intimacy of something held closer. Future free-form loop sculptures will move upward in scale and price, but this first piece remains at a symbolic entry point—an invitation into the archive and its evolution.

A small free-form loop sculpture, hand built in March 2024 and finally fired in September 2025. The piece carries the pause between those dates—an object held in waiting, uncertain if it would survive the kiln at all.

Originally titled “why now?”, the sculpture reflects the weight of empty promises and false hopes—thoughts looping on themselves, fragile but persistent. Its survival into fired form feels fitting: a work born from doubt but made solid through time and fire.

Details

  • Approximately 5 x 6 x 5 inches

  • Stoneware, free-form looped structure

  • One of one

  • Hand wash only

Collector’s Note

This piece is offered at $333 as an early sculptural form in the archive. The number is symbolic—part of a recurring motif in my work, where “3” often marks beginnings, transitions, and thresholds.

At this scale, the work sits between functional loop cups and vases—an object that belongs to the sculptural lineage, yet carries the intimacy of something held closer. Future free-form loop sculptures will move upward in scale and price, but this first piece remains at a symbolic entry point—an invitation into the archive and its evolution.