About Artemest
The Artisan

Transforming Italian Tableware into Art and Emotion

Italian artist and ceramist Coralla Maiuri transforms porcelain into dreamscapes of light, sky, and memory. Her hand-crafted ceramics and tableware blur the boundaries between art and everyday life. Inspired by nature, history, and childhood sensations of light and vastness, Maiuri’s work radiates an emotional depth that has captured collectors and design lovers worldwide.

Coralla Maiuri is an Italian artist based between Milan and Rome. Her ceramic and porcelain creations—ranging from exuberant vases and jars to refined tableware collections—are entirely handmade and painted, the result of tireless experimentation with glazes, pigments, and firing techniques. Deeply inspired by nature, history, and the layered beauty of Rome, her six porcelain series pay homage to the rooms of the Villa Borghese Gallery, merging Baroque grandeur with an almost celestial modernity. Her works have been exhibited and collected internationally, celebrated for their vibrant, painterly surfaces that seem to capture both the chaos and harmony of the natural world.

Nature, skies, and sunsets often appear in your ceramics. Is there a specific memory that continues to inspire you?

I grew up in big houses with enormous windows—no shutters, no blinds, not even curtains. The mornings were an explosion of light that woke me gently, while at night, darkness swallowed everything whole. That rhythm of light and shadow shaped me deeply. Even today, I chase that same dialogue between luminosity and void, the fragile balance that defines nature and, in many ways, life itself.

Was there a person, journey, or experience that most marked your creative path?

Two worlds left a lasting impression on me. The first was the ancient countryside of Ciociaria, where I lived as a child—wild, archaic, filled with silence and mystery. The second was my encounter with the paintings at the Jeu de Paume Museum in Paris.

Your works now appear on tables across the world—in fine hotels, private collections, and everyday homes. What moves you more: imagining the daily use of your objects, or their status as unique works of art?

What moves me most is emotion itself—when what I create moves me first. Whether it’s a cup used each morning or a vase displayed like a relic, what matters is the pulse of life within it. My pieces are alive only if they carry emotion—mine and, hopefully, that of those who encounter them.

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