Carragh Amos

Milk Ceramic Serving Set with Torn Plate

$120 SGD

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Serving Set: One hand-pinched Wobbly Bowl paired with a footed Torn Plate.

Wobbly Bowl

Hand-pinched using the pinchpot method, with a coil-built foot. Inspired by Japanese miso soup bowls but also well sized for a matcha chawan or rice bowl. Every piece is slightly different, embracing the imperfection of this age-old making technique.

Beiqe or gold/rust Australian clay, white gloss glaze. Stoneware. Electric fired to cone 6. Hand Initialled.

Bowl: H approx 7 X W approx 10.8 (cm).

Torn Plate

The rustic torn plate emphasizes the nature of wet clay, with a freshly ripped edge captured in the fired ceramic. The plate is handbuilt from a sliced slab of clay, with a coil-built foot to raise it from the table.

Beiqe or gold/rust Australian clay, white gloss glaze. Stoneware. Electric fired to cone 6. Hand Initialled and dated ‘19.

Plate: H 1.3 X W approx 13 X L approx 22 (cm).

 About the artist: 

Carragh Amos, née Knapp, was born in Auckland, New Zealand. Her rural childhood established a strong connection with natural materials. 

Amos holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts Hons (1st Class) from Elam School of Fine Arts. Despite intending to become a painter, Amos focused on sculpture after experiencing strong emotions when viewing forms in space.  Her thesis and ceramic-based graduate exhibition 'Handmade Aesthetics' considered the appeal of the handmade. 

In 2014 Amos relocated to Wellington and laid a technical foundation at the Wellington Potters Association. She also held her first solo exhibition - Hand Labour (2015). 

Amos has lived in various international cities including Singapore and Montréal. In Canada she built a body of work while sharing a ceramic studio under Atelier Creatifs. These works aimed to conjure emotions through form. Travelling throughout Japan had an especially profound influence - following this trip she adopted the reductive method of kurinuki. Returning to Singapore soon afterward (2019), Amos also found an influential mentor - wood-firer Abraham Ling. 

Carragh Amos' practice moves between fine art and functional craft. Her pieces are influenced by historical pottery of the wider Asian region. Current work celebrates process, labour, and action through hand-built ceramics. 


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