from €300.00

Golden Hour — Puddle Tray
Andrea Copp

This porcelain candle ensemble by Andrea Copp emerges from an intimate observation of Vancouver’s shifting weather systems, its constant rain, reflective surfaces, and the fragile choreography of water as it gathers, disperses, and disappears.

Each form is hand-moulded in porcelain, resting loosely on a stoneware tray that acts as both ground and landscape. The composition evokes the quiet aftermath of rainfall: shallow puddles catching light, softened edges dissolving into one another, and moments where matter appears suspended between liquidity and stillness.

Finished with layered glaze, the surfaces carry a subtle luminosity reminiscent of the “golden hour” when light breaks through cloud cover and transforms even the most modest surfaces into reflective thresholds. The interplay between opacity and sheen creates a delicate tension between permanence and fragility, control and erosion.

The work operates as a small topography—part object, part landscape—inviting a slower perception of time and material presence. It is less an arrangement than an ecosystem of quiet gestures, where light, water, and clay continuously negotiate form.

Each piece is unique. Variations in glaze, form, and composition are inherent to the process.

€350 per set (including tray)
€300 without tray

Tray:

Golden Hour — Puddle Tray
Andrea Copp

This porcelain candle ensemble by Andrea Copp emerges from an intimate observation of Vancouver’s shifting weather systems, its constant rain, reflective surfaces, and the fragile choreography of water as it gathers, disperses, and disappears.

Each form is hand-moulded in porcelain, resting loosely on a stoneware tray that acts as both ground and landscape. The composition evokes the quiet aftermath of rainfall: shallow puddles catching light, softened edges dissolving into one another, and moments where matter appears suspended between liquidity and stillness.

Finished with layered glaze, the surfaces carry a subtle luminosity reminiscent of the “golden hour” when light breaks through cloud cover and transforms even the most modest surfaces into reflective thresholds. The interplay between opacity and sheen creates a delicate tension between permanence and fragility, control and erosion.

The work operates as a small topography—part object, part landscape—inviting a slower perception of time and material presence. It is less an arrangement than an ecosystem of quiet gestures, where light, water, and clay continuously negotiate form.

Each piece is unique. Variations in glaze, form, and composition are inherent to the process.

€350 per set (including tray)
€300 without tray