Kallia’s Statement

Kallia Panopoulou is a Greek ceramic artist whose practice is rooted in nature and hand-building techniques.

She studied Product Design in London, developing a strong understanding of form, function, and design thinking. After returning to Athens in 2017, she turned to ceramics, seeking a slower and more intimate relationship with making, which she further explored at Iridanos Ceramic School. Working with clay marked a shift from structured design to a more intuitive and emotionally driven process.

Her practice is deeply shaped by time spent in nature, walking in the mountains and camping with her family on remote, quiet beaches, where observation, solitude, and sensory experience become central sources of inspiration. Alongside the natural world, her work is also informed by Gothic architecture and the organic, expressive language of Antoni Gaudí, particularly their sense of rhythm, growth, and structural fluidity.

In 2021, she established her own ceramic studio and presented her first body of work, inspired by organic forms such as sea creatures, corals, flowers, and fish bones. Her work has since evolved as a continuous practice, where forms emerge through repetition and pause, exploring themes of abundance, vulnerability, and the delicate balance between growth and decay.