Archive by Author

New Installation

This grouping of 12″, 14″ , 16″ and 18″ tiles was recently installed in a residence in Baltimore.  The couple met Natalie at the American Craft Council show in Baltimore in February.  When Natalie returned to Vermont, she put together a grouping for them which Nick, Natalie’s fiance installed last week.

Here’s what the homeowner says:

“Thank you for all your design ideas, suggestions and offering to sell your stock tile.  I must admit – had you initially told me a tile display for my sized wall was going to cost $9000, I probably would have shelved the tile idea.  Having the tiles here, seeing their beauty and creating a design to fill the space completely threw my initial budget out the window – rightfully so.  A smaller arrangement just wouldn’t have been as dramatic or fitting for the wall.  (I even wondered if we should have used more.  Can always add.)”

 

handmade, ceramic wall art tile by Natalie Blake

Working on a mural

 

Natalie is working closely with a client to design a wall mural for the client’s living room.  Using tiles we have in stock, Natalie has designed this piece, comprised of 16″, 14″ and 12″ tiles.

The client emailed Natalie an image of the rug in the room; the vibrant colors in this mural play very well with the client’s color scheme.

According to Natalie: “I really enjoyed putting this grouping together and could have kept tinkering and moving all day.  The spacing is, of course, not correct, but this is really just a first take on colors, design and general layout.”

 

 

 

handmade, ceramic wall art tile by Natalie Blake

Patchwork

We’re working on a 36-tile commission for a hospital installation.  The image below shows the center grouping of 18 tiles.  They are carved and awaiting the bisque firing.

Cynthia has been creating this piece and wrote the following about it:

“As I carved this grouping I kept thinking about the scrap quilts I’ve been making. Each square seems like it’s extracted from a larger pattern. Each pattern has a different history. We put them together and the eye flows from one to the next creating a new order and harmony.”

 

center carved

Cynthia's quilt

Cynthia’s quilt

red quilt bed

 

Here is a Photoshopped rendition of the tiles, installed in the space they will eventually adorn.

handmade, ceramic wall art tile by Natalie Blake

 

 

 

The uniqueness of our art tile

handmade, ceramic wall art tile by Natalie Blake Studios

Tree of Life, detail

 

This closeup of our Tree of Life tile mural shows the uniqueness of our art: the undulating tile, the sgraffito-carving,

the rich glaze colors.  Because each tile is handmade, no two tiles or murals are exactly alike. You are getting a

one-of-a-kind piece of art when you commission a mural by Natalie Blake Studios.  This piece is glazed in honey, jade, cashew and blue, only 4 of our 34 glazes.

 

Here are a few more closeups:

 photo copy

 

 

 

handmade, ceramic wall art tile by Natalie Blake Studios

tile detail

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Natalie to present at potters’ workshop

Jeffcoat Pottery, Calabash, NC, has invited Natalie to present at their winter workshop, February 16-17.  At this two-day event, Natalie will demonstrate throwing, carving, sculpting lids, and making and carving tiles.   Glaze formulas, her firing process, and firing schedules will be shared, along with a powerpoint of her work.

If interested, please contact Jeffcoat Pottery for registration information.  info@jeffcoatpottery.com

910-579-2400

 

Natalie Blake

Natalie Blake

 

 

Nature-based art promotes healing

 Natalie Blake Studios’ work profiled in Healthcare Design Magazine

 

In  September we completed this Tree of Life mural for Skyline Art Services.  The piece was installed in the Fort  Belvoir Community Hospital in Virginia.  We are honored that our work was selected for this prestigious hospital, which is the first of a new generation of world-class military medical facilities.  We have known for some time that our work fills a niche for art in healthcare settings, as the healthcare industry moves towards evidence-based design (EBD).   Incorporating the visual arts in the healthcare environment is a fundamental component of EBD, with proven benefits for patients, family and staff, translating into measurable outcomes in health, well-being, and cost of care. (see our recent blogpost on this topic).

Healthcare Design Magazine recently published a case study of the art at Fort Belvoir.  According to the article, “HDR established a design imperative to bring the outdoors in, and so provided the common areas with access to daylight as well as views to the forests and river beyond the site and to the campus grounds and gardens. Both the abundance of external views and the nature-based motifs of each pavilion are key components of biophilic design, the deliberate attempt to translate an understanding of the inherent human affinity with nature in the built environment.”

Read the full article here.

handmade, sgraffito-carved ceramic wall tile by Natalie Blake Studios

Tree of Life installed in women’s crisis center

This piece was recently installed at SafeNet Services, a women’s crisis center in Tulsa, OK.  The piece was commissioned by Art Collections, Inc. in Tulsa.

 

The piece measures 54″ w x 108″ h.  It is glazed in cashew, pumpkin, adobe, honey, moss, medium jade and bark.

 

handmade, ceramic wall art tile by Natalie Blake Studios

Tree of Life, handmade, ceramic wall art tile

handmade, ceramic wall art tile by Natalie Blake Studios

handmade, ceramic wall art tile by Natalie Blake Studios

 

 

Newest Backsplash, installed

Natalie and her fiance, Nick, recently installed this custom backsplash for a client in Annapolis, MD.

Natalie writes:

Bev and I met five years ago at the American Craft Council show in Baltimore where she gave me a deposit and told me she didn’t think she would ever find the kind of backsplash she was looking for, but had a hunch I might be able to make it for her. I had just started making tiles at that point and the first pieces were small squares with flowers and leaves on them. She was a ways off at that point from having her kitchen remodeled, and a couple of years later finally started asking me for glaze colors and sketches as her renovations were coming to completion. The final renovations took a while to be punch listed, and so we had yet another year and a half to think about design, and for me to create some of the glaze colors that Bev was hoping for. She wanted a purple backsplash. I hoped I wouldn’t have to make a completely purple piece, and in the end we realized that some blue and cashew colors would most suit the beautiful granite countertop fleck tones in the counters she had found.

custom backsplash tile by Natalie Blake STudios

Players, custom backsplash tile by Natalie Blake STudios

 

Last February I finally visited the house, as she was truly ready, and we agreed on colors and concept. I was to work with a painting by Anatole Kraznyansky Russian artists that they had bought while on a cruise. While I said I wasn’t interested in reading directly off this imagery, I was willing to take that image in and bounce off it to create my own feedback loop of imagery in response to this painting. And so I went home to my studio, rolled out white paper, measured out my tile sizes, and then stared at the paper. I stared for a couple of days and found myself quickly filling in images that appeared on the paper as I sat and waited. This was a most enjoyable process and felt very easeful. It was as if these figures wanted to come out on the page and be seen. The energy lines coming off these mythical figures moves from the center outward creating butterfly wing vibrations on the left of the piece and a storm at sea on the right side of the piece.

 

 

custom backsplash tile by Natalie Blake STudios

Players, custom backsplash tile by Natalie Blake STudios

 

The mythical goddess/queen figure, who showed up to me as benevolent and compassionate with powerful ram horns which give her the power gift of reverence and might, can be seen as flying in horizontal position holding a point of energy with her left hand that can be seen as either holding the cacophony of wind and storm tumult at bay, or pulling the source of that storm of energy along with her.  She is holding a tiny sailboat in her right hand. She holds it near the lute player whose large cloaked arm holds a feminine character in his sleeve. His face is the King’s face that can be found in the three faced musician facing right (the figure’s left). The other two musicians are playing a ukelele type instrument and a double-headed woodwind that blows the monarch butterfly wing sound waves.

 

On the left hand side of the kitchen, I created a single musician standing alone playing with energy lines coming out from the top of his head and cascading away to the left. He plays a double barreled lute like instrument that I am not even sure exists, but I found some interesting images on line with this kind of shape. Beautiful instruments!!!  He has a black face and to me seems to be playing perhaps some sort of jazz.  There are nine faces in the main backsplash, which happens to be my lucky number.

handmade, ceramic backsplash tile by Natalie Blake Studios

Installing backsplash tile

 

 

musicians

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Our tiles are sculptural–see for yourself!

Here’s a piece that will hang above a fireplace. We took this image in the hallway of our studio and then

were able to successfully capture the undulation and carving by taking a side view image of a few of

the tiles.

Our tiles are sculptural–they are dimensional due to the way that we shape the clay over forms.

We then add texture by carving the design through a layer of slip. This technique is called sgraffito.

And the icing on the cake is our glaze. We have 33 to choose from.  This piece is glazed in yellow,

teal, adobe and turquoise.  We used these glazes to achieve a matte finish, which was the customer’s choice.

 

handmade, ceramic wall art tile by Natalie Blake Studios

Tree of Life mural with closeup of tile