Caroline Desile spent fifteen years as an urban planning architect, before turning to ceramics to reconnect with another form of creativity. In her work, we find an interest in the dialogue between nature and architecture, manifested in lines that evoke the urban, all using organic and natural materials.
The search for a balance between these two aspects in her work is perpetual, if only in the choice to enamel pieces with more organic shapes and to leave the material raw when the composition is more geometric.
Through her work in series, she also raises questions about human constructions and social and urban functioning. Each work is designed to be both autonomous and coherent with the others, forming a whole and thus raising questions about living together and the individuality of each person, specific to each society.
Caroline Desile spent fifteen years as an urban planning architect, before turning to ceramics to reconnect with another form of creativity. In her work, we find an interest in the dialogue between nature and architecture, manifested in lines that evoke the urban, all using organic and natural materials.
The search for a balance between these two aspects in her work is perpetual, if only in the choice to enamel pieces with more organic shapes and to leave the material raw when the composition is more geometric.
Through her work in series, she also raises questions about human constructions and social and urban functioning. Each work is designed to be both autonomous and coherent with the others, forming a whole and thus raising questions about living together and the individuality of each person, specific to each society.