The Northern Rivers Ceramicist Crafting Vessels With A Soft Edge
Studio Visit

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.

Photo – Marlee Pasinetti. Art Direction + Styling – Linnea Gröndahl.
Artist and ceramic designer Layla Cluer spent all of high school thinking she would be a doctor. She backflipped at the last second and wound up studying architecture. A few years as a practicing architect led to some inevitable professional soul-searching for the creative at heart, and Layla arrived at the decision to apply to art school.
‘In true millennial style, I’ve worn a few hats this past decade,’ she laughs. Last year, Layla left her full-time job working as part of RMIT’s curatorial team, spent a month crewing on a yacht from New Zealand to Tonga (as you do!), and enrolled in ceramics classes at Lismore TAFE. This windy route to handcrafted clay was the beginnings of Softedge, her fledgling practice which she now runs from a studio on her friend’s farm outside Byron Bay. ‘It wasn’t really a studio when I moved in last November…but I could see it had great potential’, Layla reflects. Bit by bit she has been painting walls and finding equipment, and now it’s starting to feel more like the workshop she envisioned!
Layla’s process is predominantly intuitive, running with her flashes of inspiration as soon as they arrive to keep momentum. The initial moulds for these pieces can sometimes take a week or a month to cast, but means that the final result is a suite of complicated, original forms. ‘It generally takes a month or two between designing a form and seeing the first prototype coming out of the kiln finished. I’m learning patience…’ she says.
The ceramics of Softedge are intended to be both functional and sculptural. ‘I try to make pieces that are both light enough and robust enough to be used every day, but in a form that invites you to consider their usefulness.’ Her deliciously pot-bellied jugs and curvaceous cups could just as easily be an art piece to admire as they could be used as everyday vessels!
Layla intends to keep her style ambiguous so she can constantly slip between forms without feeling bound to one particular type of expression. ‘I think of Softedge as an evolving project about everyday objects and the blurry boundaries and spongy edges of their disciplines,’ she says. ‘For now, it takes form in a collection of slip cast tableware. But I have a few collaborations in the pipeline that will take on other forms.’
We can’t wait to see what’s next!
Shop Layla’s Softedge ceramics here!