Designlines

Alissa Coe, porcelain

Alissa Coe

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Balancing on Alissa Coe’s worktable, a porcelain sculpture resembling a giant curl of white tree bark awaits its final finish – a silver lining that should develop a warm tarnish over time. For Coe, the process often points the way. “Ideas come out of the actual making,” she says. “It just is what it is.” One of the city’s most sought-after ceramicist­s, she conjured the ethereal dandelion spores that dangle above the Four Seasons’ reception area, as well as the hexagonal vases that line the shelves at Mjölk. “I’m drawn to elemental forms, sharp angles and clean lines. But at the same time, my biggest inspiratio­n is nature.”

The wood-like sculpture she’s completing now was made by folding a rolled porcelain sheet cylindrica­lly and carving away at its skin with a wire loop. It was commission­ed by James Robertson Art Consultant­s, the firm affiliated with many Yabu Pushelberg projects, including the Four Seasons. They’ve been fans of Coe’s work for nearly a decade, since she was one half of coe&waito, with Carly Waito. Industrial design classmates at OCAD, the two detoured into ceramics in their final year. “I didn’t want to sit at a computer, designing,” says Coe. “I loved the immediacy of ceramics.” The high-end porcelain market is a tough nut to crack, and Waito eventually moved on to painting – but Coe, after some soul-searching in Europe, returned to the craft in full force.

Her approach to ceramics involves a commitment to “no formal training.” She has mastered both the pottery wheel – creating a hundred pomegranat­es, in various stages of growth, for a sculptural wall piece – and the mould, slip casting Luca Nichetto–designed coffee carafes with saturated colours and hand-carved lines. When it comes to her own vessel designs, she keeps the forms elemental and emphasizes the porcelain’s quality, whether smoothly elastic or translucen­tly vitreous, in biscuit white. Porcelain, pure and simple, is in good hands. ALISSA-COE.SQUARESPAC­E.COM

SEE HEAT WAVE, An EXHIBIT At THE TORONTO DESIGN OFFSITE FESTIVAL HUB (1108 QUEEN St W) FEATURING COE’S WINTRY-WHITE WOOD SCULPTURE, FROM JAN 18 to 24.

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