Gifts of the Earth™
When I first went to India ten years ago, arriving
at the hotel in the middle of the night, I was struck by the most beautiful
selection of pots decorating the foyer. In due course I realised the extent
of the Handicrafts Industry created largely for export to the specification
of many western companies.I also saw the condition of living that millions
of people endure in India.
I noticed endless examples of the most exquisite craftsmanship,
design & colour in architecture, textiles, & artefacts of all
kinds; and fell in love with the Indian sub-continent. I have met so many
people over the years and been thoroughly spoilt.
As I travelled around India, I visited and talked to
and searched for and found some wonderful individual artists and craftsmen
and women who have been delighted to work directly with me to produce
their finest work. Working directly together allowed us to promote their
own aesthetic and finest work and creative skills, and to be paid their
proper due, directly from me. Even the name `Gifts of the Earth' was chosen
to highlight a more natural organic expression of making and trading in
today's' Global Village.
Gifts of the Earth - Collections
Maggi Faulkner directs her efforts towards searching for and finding
individual craftsmen and women in India who are not involved in the major
Handicrafts Industry. They work out a collection that has grown out of
an Indian aesthetic, traditional skill with contemporary interpretation.
In this way Gifts of the Earth Collections are culturally and aesthetically
Indian. In the same spirit, proper payment is made directly to the craftspeople
for their work.
Ebony Sunset Collection
In India, a Kumbhar, or Potter comes form the Sanskrit word Kumbha or
water pot, which in the myth of origin contained the nectar of immortality.
More recently the creative fusion of the brilliant 16th Century Moghul
Hindu culture has informed generations of Indian artists and craftsmen,
and the Kumbhars are still an integral part of everyday Indian culture.
The Ebony Sunset Collection has been created by award winning Rajasthani
Potter Gin Raj Prasad. His work fuses traditional forms and colour with
contemporary expressions of feeling and aesthetic in clay. Each individual
piece is hand thrown and hand burnished. The woodfired kilns produce earthenware
pots and vessels with Black, Orange and Biscuit markings. The Ebony Sunset
Collection includes a series of elegant urns, pitchers and pots for architectural
and indoor settings, and smaller decorative display goods - bowls, lidded
pots and bottles. Each piece is unique as the wood smoke produces fine
colouring and patterns.
All given sizes are approximate as each pot is hand thrown on a hand
operated wheel, and buffed giving the finished pot a warm lustre, and
then wood fired which creates the wonderful orange & black impressionist
colouring. Real collector's pieces with the potters signature on each
pot and with a certificate of authenticity supplied with every purchase.
Miniature Selection
Perfect for gifts, as well as for collectors. A selection of beautifully
crafted smaller pottery pieces to display in a group or individually.
The latest collection consists of bottles, flasks, lidded bowls, and scaled
down elegant Anar, Kadhu and Tamba shaped pots. The miniature collection
will appeal to those who appreciate beautiful craftsmanship but lack the
space to display larger pieces, and for collectors of `Miniatures'.
Decorative Pieces
Specially selected medium sized pots suited for retail, and for displaying
on shelves and around the home. They are also ideal gifts and wedding
presents.
Each pot is a unique work of art - the patterns and finishing are completely
individual - made by the most gifted living potters in India today. So
highly are these pieces prized by the makers that they are supplied with
a certificate of authenticity.
Architectural &
Freestanding Pieces
These outstanding, graceful tall architectural and freestanding pieces
are perfect for visual punctuation in open spaces, entrance areas, hotels,
offices, restaurants, & open-plan areas.
They can be used to divide space or different areas of activities. Lighting
adds to their beauty and aesthetic appreciation in daytime or by night.
Bowl shaped vessels can be lined and planted for additional dramatic effect.
Elegant wrought iron stands to add height and stature to the piece, and
can be bought for individual Bilauni open vessels.
These large ceramic pieces are produced on hand-turned wheels and represent
the apogee of craftsmanship possible using this technique. Each piece
is signed by the maker and presented with a certificate of authenticity.
The Marlis Collection
- Fabric Fruit and Animals
Marlis has had a dynamic and creative career since gaining a Degree in
Ceramics from Croydon School of Art in 1973-76 where her interest in textiles
took root.
After Croydon, Marlis developed her own fashion collections
in the late seventies and early eighties, making the most exquisite jackets
which were sought after by the rich and famous, selling in London and
New York.
Interspersed with fashion collections Marlis worked
with Peter Minschal the Carnival Grand Master, on fabulous carnival costume
creations in Trinidad, which richly influenced both her fashion creations,
and subsequent work on the main body of her work on the Soft Sculptural
Collection.
This Soft Sculptural Collection demonstrates Marlis'
commitment to working from an environmental perspective. This collection
comprises either cushion/seating, carpet or sculptural pieces.
The creation of the environmental project has culminated
in the creation of her Soft Sculptural Collection, and involved using
the weavers waste from the Indian craftsmen around her home in Northern
India.
Marlis will travel to the UK to prepare her Soft Sculptural
forms prior to despatch to the Customer. Customers will be advised individually
of the delivery for each soft sculpture.
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