Pièce murale en grès chamotté.
Unique
After studying at the Art Deco school in Strasbourg and Camberwell College of Arts in London, she set up a family workshop in the heart of the Pyrenees. She has participated in many residencies, notably in Xian, China, and Vallauris, France. In recent years, she has participated in numerous and significant exhibitions: "Ceramics Now" in Paris, "Formes vivantes" at Sèvres – National Museum and Manufacture, "Contre Nature" at MOCO in Montpellier, and "Toucher Terre" at the Villa Datris Foundation in L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue. A finalist for the 2023 LOEWE FOUNDATION Craft Prize, her piece Buisson N°2 was exhibited at the Noguchi Museum in New York for the occasion. In June 2023, the Théodore Deck Museum dedicated a personal exhibition to her work.
- H: 49 cm
- L: 35 cm
- P: 10 cm
Trained in the visual arts in France and the United Kingdom, Lindner has established herself as a leading figure in contemporary artistic ceramics. Her sculptures, composed through the assembly, knotting, and twisting of soft clay coils, are distinguished by their undulating curves and pastel hues, which evoke a sense of organic movement. Her work is traversed by living forms, animal, vegetal, human, or microscopic, that blur the boundaries between the natural and the imagined.
In her practice, Lindner plays with contrasts and tensions: between softness and hardness, lightness and density, matte and gloss. This dialectic creates a deliberate visual ambiguity, an oscillation between what seems solid and what appears fragile. Her creative process always begins with a reflection on movement, flow, and color; each glazed stoneware piece emerges from meticulous attention to folds, tension, and material plasticity, evoking the vitality of living matter.
Her work has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions, including at the Musée Théodore Deck (2023), Fondation Villa Datris (Toucher Terre, 2022), MO.CO. Montpellier (Contre-Nature, 2022), Musée Adrien Dubouché (2020), Maison des Arts de Châtillon (2019), the Musée des Arts Décoratifs de Paris (2011), and the Grand Palais during the Salon Révélations (2015).
