MAKERS | EUROPE | FRANCE | CERAMICS
Geoffrey Luff | Ceramicist

In his French studio, ceramicist Geoffrey Luff revives Bernard Palissy’s ceramic art using a curious mixture of roadkill and molds. His detailed, lifelike creations blend nature, science, and craftsmanship with remarkable precision and personal dedication.
In the mid-16th century, Bernard Palissy roamed the forests and swamps of Touraine in search of life—frogs, snakes, leaves—each creature a sacred offering to his kiln. He suffered for his art, famously burning his furniture to keep the fire alive, and described the catastrophic failure of a firing as “like a great many musket and cannon shots.” The resulting works—ceramic tableaux of uncanny naturalism—blurred the line between science, art, and sorcery, and became known simply as Palissy ware.
Nearly five centuries later, in a quiet workshop in Cotignac, Geoffrey Luff is one of the few continuing this rare and obsessive tradition. A chance encounter in a French museum led him, quite unexpectedly, into a lifelong devotion to Palissy’s world. Over the last three decades, Luff has not only revived the techniques of Palissy, but refined them, with a sensitivity and precision that is utterly his own.
To read the rest of this article, and see more of Geoffrey's work, order Cabana Issue 24.

- - - - - - - - - -