TELL US ABOUT YOUR BACKGROUND AND YOUR WORK?
I am half Spanish, half Equatorial-Guinean; born and raised in Spain. I studied Translation, which I love. While I don’t translate anymore, I am realising now how the observational and mediation skills I learnt while studying are a key part of the way I approach my ceramics practice. After having lived in Madrid, Leipzig, Vienna and, briefly, San Francisco, I moved to London ten years ago. It was when I moved here that I took up pottery.
My practice has changed considerably in the last three years. When I started, I mainly made tableware. At the moment, I work on projects that involve some research and storytelling and that, artistically or aesthetically, blur the boundaries between the vessel and sculpture.
WHAT HAS BEEN THE PROUDEST MOMENT IN YOUR CAREER TO DATE?
Being part of the exhibition ‘Body Vessel Clay: Black Women, Ceramics and Contemporary Art’ curated by Dr Jareh Das at Two Temple Place and York Art Gallery in 2022.
It was the first time my work was exhibited on a non-purely-craft context and along with other amazing black women who I admire. Moreover, I had the honour to share space with two of my main sources of inspiration, Ladi Kwali and Magdalene Odundo. That exhibition changed the way I see myself, as an artist, and was a huge encouragement to continue working on the new path I had just embarked on then.