Skip to product information
1 of 6

Teapot no.2

Teapot no.2

Sepideh Jahanpanah

Regular price €280,00
Regular price Sale price €280,00
Sale Sold out
Tax included.

This teapot functions perfectly as a teapot or a unique decoration in your house.

In my teapots, I try to combine the delicacy of porcelain, roughness of the dark clay, generally primitive attitude of my techniques and modern lifestyle with a pinch of nature.

I call my teapots "Treepots", as a suggestion of a creative follower on Instagram

Capacity 250 ml

Delivery time: 7 days.

Materials & Process

Dark chocolate stoneware ceramic, porcelain, stoneware glaze, wood, hemp

Dimensions & weight

(teapot) : H: 17cm W: 21cm, D: 10.5cm Weight: 931g Capacity: 700 ml

(one cup) : H: 6.5cm W: 6cm, D: 6cm Weight: 155g Capacity: 100 ml

Width:

Height:

Depth:

Weight: 750 g

Production & Shipping

Where available the costs of delivery will be displayed to you on the site during the check-out process. We chose the most appropriate shipping method for each product. Please note that in each case the cost of delivery will be added to the total you are required to pay us for the product.

Care Instructions

All artworks are unique, therefore always handle the items carefully. You can not put this piece in a washing machine or microwave, due to the natural wood used in it.

View full details

about the maker

Sepideh Jahanpanah

Sepideh Jahanpanah is an artist and a ceramist currently living and working in The Hague, Netherlands.

Her artistic interest was originally inspired, and has at it’s foundation, Sepideh’s Persian background, an indescribably rich culture that goes back thousands of years and in which she is inevitably in love with. Having left Iran to come to the Netherlands Sepideh has been studying and experimenting with Japanese Ceramic technics and the Wabi Sabi worldview, whose influence can be seen in her work.

Sepideh’s Bachelor Degree was at The Art University of Isfahan, Iran, focused on ceramics. Later she won a place to study an MA in Artistic Research at the Royal Academy of Arts in The Hague, The Netherlands where she has been working since.

Go to maker

More from Sepideh Jahanpanah

1 of 8