Skip to Content
JM | Jamila Monahan
 JM | Jamila Monahan
acquire
Functional Pottery
Sculptural Vessels
Honey
about
exhibitions
gallery
stockists + partnerships
contact
0
0
JM | Jamila Monahan
 JM | Jamila Monahan
acquire
Functional Pottery
Sculptural Vessels
Honey
about
exhibitions
gallery
stockists + partnerships
contact
0
0
Folder: acquire
Back
Functional Pottery
Sculptural Vessels
Honey
about
exhibitions
gallery
stockists + partnerships
contact
IMG_8141.jpeg
IMG_8139.jpeg
IMG_8134.jpeg
IMG_8145.jpeg
Sculptural Vessels › "Ebb and Flow"

"Ebb and Flow"

$1,625.00

Hand-formed Stoneware Clay base, food safe quail egg glaze, locally foraged Red Osier Dogwood and Wild Willow, Canadian Arctic Driftwood.
10x10x19”

This piece draws inspiration from the landscapes of the Yukon and the natural materials that root us to place. Its organic form recalls the movement of rivers—channels that carve through the land and through our lives, shaping terrain while carrying and holding what is left behind.

Driftwood collected from Atlin Lake, on the Yukon–British Columbia border, serves as both material and marker of place, becoming a vessel of memory that connects the work to the landscape from which it was gathered. Dogwood and Wild Willow, ethically foraged closer to home, extend this dialogue with nature, while the stoneware base draws influence from both the bedrock of the Niagara Escarpment and the delicate markings of quail eggs from my homestead.

Sculptural yet functional, the work reflects the duality inherent in nature itself: enduring and ever-changing, rooted and in motion.

Hand-formed Stoneware Clay base, food safe quail egg glaze, locally foraged Red Osier Dogwood and Wild Willow, Canadian Arctic Driftwood.
10x10x19”

This piece draws inspiration from the landscapes of the Yukon and the natural materials that root us to place. Its organic form recalls the movement of rivers—channels that carve through the land and through our lives, shaping terrain while carrying and holding what is left behind.

Driftwood collected from Atlin Lake, on the Yukon–British Columbia border, serves as both material and marker of place, becoming a vessel of memory that connects the work to the landscape from which it was gathered. Dogwood and Wild Willow, ethically foraged closer to home, extend this dialogue with nature, while the stoneware base draws influence from both the bedrock of the Niagara Escarpment and the delicate markings of quail eggs from my homestead.

Sculptural yet functional, the work reflects the duality inherent in nature itself: enduring and ever-changing, rooted and in motion.

You Might Also Like

"A Fine Balance"
"Fast Fashion" IMG_6692.jpeg IMG_6672.jpeg IMG_6703.jpeg IMG_6678.jpeg IMG_6670.jpeg
"Fast Fashion"
IMG_8234.jpeg IMG_8218.jpeg IMG_8219.jpeg IMG_8220.jpeg IMG_8229.jpeg IMG_8205.jpeg
"New Beginnings"
"Memory Keeper" IMG_8245.jpeg IMG_8246.jpeg IMG_8247.jpeg IMG_8249.jpeg
"Memory Keeper"
"Parabolics" 2025_10_01_0088.JPG 2025_10_01_0087.JPG 2025_10_01_0084.JPG 2025_10_01_0086.JPG 2025_10_01_0083.JPG 2025_10_01_0083.JPG 2025_10_01_0085.JPG
"Parabolics"
JM Jamila Monahan Pottery logo