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Esas Mesas

Florero Teresita de Boca con Textura – Hand-Sculpted Barro Rojo Vase

Florero Teresita de Boca con Textura – Hand-Sculpted Barro Rojo Vase

    Regular price $155.00 USD
    Regular price Sale price $155.00 USD
    Sale Sold out

    The Florero Teresita de Boca con Textura is both vessel and sculpture. Shaped by Taller Manos Que Ven in San Antonino Castillo Velasco, Oaxaca, it combines a serene face, braided rim, and a body patterned with textured scales—evoking ripples of water or protective armor.

    Made from barro rojo, each vase is hand-shaped and low-temperature fired. No two are the same—the firing process brings out natural variations in tone, from soft terracotta to deeper, smoke-marked shades. This unpredictability is part of its beauty, a record of its passage through earth and fire.

    Ideal for flowers or as a standalone sculpture, it is a piece that brings Oaxacan artistry into daily ritual.

    Product Details

    Size: 20 cm
    Material: Barro Rojo (natural red clay)
    Hand-formed, low-temperature fired
    Limited availability: 5 in stock

    Artisan Information

    Maintenance & Care

    N/A

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    About the Region

    Red Clay Ceramics from Oaxaca

    In the mountains of Oaxaca, clay is more than earth — it is memory, ancestry, and prayer. For generations, artisans have shaped barro rojo — the deep red clay of the region — into vessels that carry both beauty and meaning. The work is guided not only by vision but by touch — fingers tracing lines, palms pressing form, each gesture becoming an act of remembrance. In their words, “las manos son mi memoria” — my hands are my memory.

    The pieces are formed from low-temperature ceramics, a technique rooted in Oaxaca’s long history of pottery. The clay is hand-dug from local soil, prepared with care, and worked without haste. Yet technique is only part of the story. Each piece carries layers of symbolism: the curve of a pot echoing the body, textures recalling earth and water, surfaces that seem to breathe with the memory of their makers. Their forms feel both ancient and modern, tied to everyday ritual but elevated into art.