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Ronald van der Hilst | Tulip Ceramicist

 

 

Dutch-born artist and landscape designer Ronald van der Hilst combines a passion for nature and ceramics, creating permanent pieces that contrast with the ephemeral essence of his gardens. Influenced by his education in Breda and his fascination with tulips, Ronald's work spans ceramics, garden design, and product design, celebrating nature's intricate beauty in every piece.

 

How did you come to your craft?

"Creating things and nature has always been my thing. Creating gardens is my main occupation, but I really love creating things that are - unlike gardens - permanent. Making a garden is like starting a process you can never fully control. It has that ephemeral aspect that I love, which keeps gardens so fascinating. Making a drawing or a ceramic object has the opposite aspect: it is you, not nature, who is in control of the final result.

"Ceramics is perhaps something that came later in my creative process. I remember my pocket garden in my parents' garden, which had an aspect of an oil drop on water: it became bigger with time. Then drawing, spinning wool and colouring it with natural pigments and weaving. But it was at the academy in Breda that ceramics really came into my life. It was there that I discovered the fascination of three-dimensional work."

How and where did you learn the technique?

"I had an education at the academy in Breda. My idea was to concentrate on painting, but my enthusiasm and results were better in ceramics in a way that I thought to change directions. But I decided to change radically and choose landscape architecture.

 

 

How do you plan, prepare and execute your works?

"I have two methods: one is to make scale drawings based on the function I want it to have. The other method is more intuitive: I just start with a piece of clay or wax and see where it goes. When I don't have the technique, I supervise the production based on my drawings or models, like the glass tulip vases made in Murano. The interesting thing about creating things in materials or techniques that you don't control is that you don't feel any limits. In this way, I have often achieved surprisingly good results with the craftsmen."

Who or what most influences your work?

"I can get a lot of inspiration from nature, but also from art, especially sculpture. I can be so amazed at how people have taken completely new and very personal paths in their work. My own garden [also influences my work]: to see how things develop and grow and the architecture of leaves and flowers. But I also love visiting nurseries and (good) gardens: to be surprised by things you didn't know before.

"The tulip is, of course, a main theme in my object designs and drawings. It is a constant theme that has been surprising me already for more than 25 years. Last year I even presented a tulip perfume, which I created with the olfactory artist Laura De Coninck."

One Last Thing... An Object you’ll never part with?

My Rotring drawing pens. And a little brooch from my mother, the only piece she had from her mother.

 

Interview by Emma Becque
Images from Ronald van der Hilst

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