Ceramic Art and Interior Design — A Guide by Durao Studio

Ceramic art and interior design share the same logic: both are about the relationship between objects and space. A handmade ceramic piece placed correctly in a room does something that purchased accessories cannot — it introduces a specific presence, a material weight, a surface that changes with the light. This guide covers how to think about ceramic art in interior design, from choosing a piece to placing it.
Ceramic Art for Interior Design — The Practical Guide
For interior designers and private buyers working with studio ceramic art for the first time, understanding how to source, specify, and document a piece is as important as knowing what to look for visually. This guide covers the full picture — from identifying genuine studio pottery to working directly with the artist.
→ Read: Ceramic Art for Interior Design — A Practical Guide for Designers
How to Decorate with Ceramic Vases — The Sculptural Approach
The most effective way to use ceramic vases in an interior is to treat them as sculptural objects — not containers. A wheel-thrown stoneware vase with genuine formal presence doesn’t need to hold anything. It is already doing what it was made to do: occupy space with intention.
→ Read: How to Decorate with Ceramic Vases — The Sculptural Approach
How to Style Ceramic Objects on Shelves and Surfaces
The principles that govern a shelf govern a console, a dining table, a windowsill, and a floor corner. Negative space, odd numbers, graduated heights, and material contrast — the practical rules for composing ceramic objects in a room.
→ Read: How to Style Ceramic Objects on Shelves and Surfaces
Black Ceramic Vases for Modern Interiors
Black ceramic vases are the defining sculptural anchor of modern interiors in 2026. Why they work, how to place them, and what distinguishes a mineral slip surface from a commercial black glaze.
→ Read: Black Ceramic Vases for Modern Interiors — The 2026 Case
Abstract Ceramic Sculpture in Interior Design
A sculpture doesn’t offer utility as justification for its presence — it offers itself. How to choose an abstract ceramic sculpture, where to place it, and what makes the Moradores series different from decorative objects.
→ Read: Abstract Ceramic Sculpture for the Home — How to Choose
What Makes a Ceramic Piece Worth Collecting
Not every ceramic piece is worth collecting. Five questions a buyer should ask — about provenance, process, singularity, surface, and documentation — before committing to a piece that claims to be more than decoration.
→ Read: What Makes a Ceramic Piece Worth Collecting — A Buyer’s Guide

Browse the Collections
Every piece at Durao Studio is handmade in high-fire stoneware in Fernando Durao’s Buenos Aires studio. One of a kind. Ships to the United States with a signed certificate of authenticity.
Unikas Black — Handmade Black Stoneware Vases
Unikas Quartz — White Mineral-Texture Vessels
Moradores — Abstract Ceramic Sculptures
To discuss a project or inquire about a specific piece, contact Fernando directly. All inquiries are answered personally.
Follow the studio: @durao.studio
For context on the role of decorative arts in interior design, see Decorative arts on Wikipedia.