Ceramic artist Christine Moquet likes to create her ceramic objects by playing on contrasting materials – the mattness of biscuit and the soft transparency of glaze – and using different techniques to invent her imaginary worlds. Her artistic creativity has led her to design collections made up of unique pieces or very small series.
She uses throwing, modelling and slab techniques to produce all her creations.
She loves mixing materials, and her career path has led her to train in jewelry techniques as well, to create and design unique and poetic jewelry collections.
Each piece is designed one by one in her studio, making up a collection of unique pieces.
Primitives

This stoneware collection, inspired by the world of La Borne and its wood-fired kilns, also reflects a new direction in my work as a ceramist. Minimalist pieces, in which the material plays an essential role. The search for rougher textures enables me to create these unique pieces of apparent simplicity.
Illustrations

As a graphic composition, the collection starts with a story to tell and takes you to imaginary lands. Fish meet zebras, the butterfly woman admires a lighthouse, a silhouette runs over the rooftops of Paris…The collection has been designed to make you dream every day. Full of delicacy, these pieces are made from french porcelain and feature drawings, graphics and original, personal photos. The inside of the porcelain is covered with a transparent glaze, while the outside is left in matte biscuit.
Textures

Collection of delicately sculpted Porcelains, textured to the extreme, right up to the breaking point.
Collection inspired by nature, flowers and marine fauna
A plastic work, around printed porcelain, textured to the breaking point to obtain the transparency proper to the material.
Sewn with indigo-dyed fabric to create a series of pieces blending fashion inspiration with textural folds and creases.
Contemporary Jewelry

Collab Margaux Cormier
Unique porcelain pieces combining precious gold and silver materials, made entirely by hand to achieve a true jewelry finish.
Cutting, soldering, assembling porcelain pieces, taking the time to perfect a finish. Insert a precious stone into a porcelain piece that has been imagined to create a unique and precious piece of jewelry. Play with metal and fragile porcelain to create a poetic composition.
Memories : screen printing on porcelain

Personal photographs hand-printed using traditional silkscreen or porcelain engraving techniques.
They illustrate memories of places that have touched me, like a trace of the past.


