Introducing Nuria Figueiredo.
A ceramic artist whose work unfolds at the intersection of ritual, memory, and imagination. Working from her studio Casa Chamota in Pontevedra, Galicia, she approaches clay as a material capable of holding the invisible — gestures, beliefs, and stories that move quietly through everyday life.
Her practice draws from the intangible heritage of her region: popular rituals, protective symbols, oral histories, and the landscape itself. These influences surface through figures, vessels, and small sculptural scenes that feel at once familiar and otherworldly — inhabited by guardians, hybrids, and tender presences that resist clear definition.
Trained in Fine Arts at the University of the Basque Country and in Artistic Ceramics at the EMAO School of Arts and Crafts in Vigo, Figueiredo works intuitively, allowing form to emerge through hand-modeling and repetition. Each piece carries subtle variations, emphasizing individuality, care, and the passage of time.
Rather than offering narratives to be decoded, her objects are meant to accompany — to live within domestic spaces as contemporary talismans, quietly bridging the ancestral and the present.