Silène Fry
Ceramic Forms in the Spirit of Wabi-Sabi

© Silène Fry: Silène in her studio with her AMAGANE porcelain collection
“Wabi sabi is a state of the heart. It is a deep in-breath and a slow exhale. It is felt in a moment of real appreciation—a perfect moment in an imperfect world.”
– Beth Kempton
About the Artist
Silène Fry’s journey as a ceramicist unfolds as a narrative of transformation, exploration, and connection. Raised between France and Switzerland and now based in Paris, she first encountered ceramics in 2018 while living in New York. A chance introduction to a Japanese ceramics workshop ignited a passion that would profoundly reshape her creative path.
Her work is deeply informed by the philosophy of wabi-sabi—an embrace of imperfection, ephemerality, and authenticity. Through her creations, Silène pays homage to nature, chance, and instinct, revealing an intimate dialogue between the artist and her material. At Silène Fry Atelier, the creative process holds as much importance as the finished piece. Her ceramics celebrate the unexpected, balancing technical mastery with an openness to “happy accidents.” Her work reveals mineral tones and organic forms, drawing inspiration from Korean moon jars and Japanese tsubos, with each piece remaining singular—never identical. Over the past year, her artistic universe has expanded through wall installations composed of dozens of porcelain elements, each one individually shaped and textured.
An obsession with texture lies at the core of her practice. From raw surfaces to delicate, tactile details, her work captures the very essence of the materials she engages with. In 2021, Silène returned to Europe, channeling her passion for texture, movement and artistic freedom into a flourishing ceramic practice at the heart of her studio based in Pantin, in the suburbs of Paris.
The major exhibitions of Silène Fry include Tokimeku Yûyake (2025), an exclusive collaboration with the Pequignet at 60 rue de Rennes in Paris; Galerie Suzan (2025), where she presented unique stoneware pieces such as the Sakura Mer vases; and White Faceted (2023), a showcase of one-of-a-kind works in white grogged stoneware exhibited at the Galerie Suzan.

© Silène Fry: AMAGAME wall installation made of porcelain and covered with gold enamel. Diameter of each piece: from 5 cm to 12 cm. Photo credit: Edouard Bierry
“When I first stepped into a Japanese ceramics studio in New York, it felt like a true epiphany. From that very first day, I was filled with a pure and lasting joy.”
Softness and delicacy were the first impressions Silène left during our conversation. Deeply sensitive and attuned to the world around her from an early age, she explored painting, collage, printmaking, and dance before ultimately finding her true voice in ceramics. Now based in Paris, she has devoted herself entirely to the development of her ceramic practice, creating exclusively artistic pieces. “When I first stepped into a Japanese ceramics studio in New York, it felt like a true epiphany. From that very first day, I was filled with a pure and lasting joy”, explans Silène.
The ceramics of Silène Fry can be closely connected to the concept of Seijaku, as her work embodies a sense of quiet presence and subtle balance that invites calm and reflection; through simple forms, restrained textures, and natural tones, her pieces create a gentle, grounding experience, encouraging the viewer to slow down and become more aware of the present moment—much like Seijaku, which is not merely silence, but a peaceful stillness that exists even within the movement and unpredictability inherent to the ceramic process.

© Silène Fry: Tsumitori-details, photo credit: Edouard Bierry
Curious and attentive to the impulses of the world surrounding her, Silène enters into a dialogue with the material, allowing herself to be guided by it. As she explains: “My work is a kind of materialization of letting go. I am in a state of pure exploration, allowing myself to be surprised and embracing the result.”
The final pieces are often resulting from “happy accidents”, because as a piece goes through shaping, drying, glazing, and firing in the kiln, many things are hard to fully control—like heat, air, reactions of glaze, reactions with different added material, and small differences in the clay—so even tiny changes can cause unexpected results such as cracks, warping, or surprising colors and textures.“Inspiration emergens from the quietest details of daily life, painting, from art—particularly contemporary art—or from the quiet poetry of a folded fabric or the vegetal world”, she adds.
Deeply inspired by Japanese culture, Silène gives each of her ceramic collections a Japanese name, transcending linguistic boundaries to reveal her artistic philosophy. The Tsumitori series, for instance, is a quiet ode to the plants that surround us and to the subtle beauty of the vegetal world. Each plant fragment is carefully dipped in slip-cast porcelain, leaving a delicate imprint—a frozen, eternal memory.
Beyond the literal act of imprinting, Tsumitori embodies a mindful dialogue with nature: an appreciation of ephemerality, a gentle acknowledgment of life’s fleeting moments, and a reverent attention to the smallest details. Each composition is unique and versatile, designed to be mounted on a wall, placed flat, or used as a central piece, inviting viewers to experience the intimacy and quiet poetry of the natural world.

© Silène Fry: Tsumitori series, made and crafted in porcelain. Diameter of the pieces: 5 to 12 cm
“My work is a kind of materialization of letting go. I am in a state of pure exploration, allowing myself to be surprised and embracing the result.”
Silène cherishes the wheel-throwing technique of shaping clay on a rotating wheel, allowing the creation of symmetrical forms such as bowls and vases. This technique aligns perfectly with her desire for accumulation, which carries a landscape-like quality. She seeks to conquer and inhabit space, integrating her pieces so that they become an intrinsic part of the surrounding environment. In her Sakura series, Silène Fry draws inspiration from the profound symbolism of cherry blossoms in Japanese culture—ephemeral, delicate, and a reminder of the transient beauty of life. While forming a cohesive whole, each vase remains a unique piece, offering an endless exploration of shapes and textures.
Silène took the Sakura vases series even further, by integrating them into urban installations in Paris called Instants Suspendus (“Suspended Moments”), creating moments of quiet reflection and contemplation, offering a serene pause within the relentless, hyper-dynamic rhythm of city life. Each piece becomes a small sanctuary, inviting viewers to slow down and connect with the fleeting, poetic beauty that surrounds them.

© Silène Fry: Sakura River series, porcelain. Diameter of each piece: 5 cm to 14 cm

© Silène Fry: Sakura River series, wall installation. Photo credit: Félicien Delorme

© Silène Fry: Amagane series, Made in porcelain and covered with a gold glaze. Diameter of each piece: 5 cm to 12 cm.
Amagane takes inspiration from the world of pastry, with soft curves, generous shapes, and folded textures that look like cream frozen in motion. These rounded and inviting forms seem as if they were whipped by hand and then set by the heat of the fire. But beneath this softness, the glaze becomes more intense, revealing copper and bronze tones that almost look metallic, like marks left by strong firing. What first feels gentle slowly turns into something more raw and mineral.Each piece becomes like a small creation shaped by fire, balancing sweetness and strength, softness and tension—a quiet dialogue between the surface and what lies beneath, captured in a moment of change.
The technique resonates with Silène’s desire for accumulation, giving her compositions a landscape-like quality. She seeks to inhabit and transform space, allowing her works to become an integral part of their surroundings. Every composition is unique: it can be mounted on a wall, laid flat, or presented as a centerpiece on a table, shaping the environment and inviting viewers to engage with it. Crafted in porcelain and finished with glaze, each work evokes both tactile and visual delight, bridging softness and strength, intimacy and presence.

© Silène Fry: Amagane installation. Photo credit: Edouard Bierry
In the ceramic artwork of Silène Fry,every crack, curve, and unexpected glaze becomes a testament to this vision, echoing the spirit of the Japanese aesthetic wabi-sabi, where, as Leonard Koren writes, beauty is ‘imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete,’ and where the overlooked or the irregular is celebrated as essential: “Ceramics changed the way I see things, letting me recognize the imperfect as beautiful in its flaws and uniqueness.”
“Ceramics changed the way I see things, letting me recognize the imperfect as beautiful in its flaws and uniqueness.”
More about the work of Silène Fry
Instagram: silène fry atelier (@silenefryatelier)
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