Catherine Dix

Catherine Dix

Catherine has built hybrid objects intuitively, playing on balance, emptiness and fullness, shadow and light. The technique of mounting on the plate and the choice of working with stoneware with irregular reliefs, give her ceramics an architectural and raw aspect.

11 products

Catherine Dix was born in Paris in 1970, she lives and works with stoneware in Périgord after spending 10 years in fashion.

Catherine built hybrid objects intuitively, playing on balance, emptiness and fullness, shadow and light. The technique of mounting on the plate and the choice of working with stoneware with irregular reliefs, give her ceramics an architectural and raw aspect.

These anthropomorphic bottles become tripod creatures, often perched high: a subtle blend of primitive poetry and constructivist art, a link between modernity and ancestral character.

These creations are fired at high temperature, glazed and sometimes decorated with engobes of large colored brushstrokes referring to abstract expressionism and the free and nervous decorations of certain Japanese ceramics.

Latest exhibitions :

- 2024, Hotel Brack // Philippe Starck , Paris

- 2023, Natasha Baskin, New York

- 2023, Exposition "Bougeoirs"// Anne Sirot , Paris​

- 2023, Marché Céramique de Bussière Badil, Dordogne 

  • Catherine Dix was born in Paris in 1970, she lives and works with stoneware in Périgord after spending 10 years in fashion.

    Catherine has built hybrid objects intuitively, playing on balance, emptiness and fullness, shadow and light. The technique of mounting on the plate and the choice of working with stoneware with irregular reliefs, give her ceramics an architectural and raw aspect.

    These anthropomorphic bottles become tripod creatures, often perched high: a subtle blend of primitive poetry and constructivist art, a link between modernity and ancestral character.

    These creations are fired at high temperature, glazed and sometimes decorated with engobes of large colored brushstrokes referring to abstract expressionism and the free and nervous decorations of certain Japanese ceramics.