The Pithos Urn (pithos — the ancient Greek term for large storage jars of exactly this form) does not look made. It looks found.
A large, wide-shouldered terracotta jar with a thick rolled rim, two small applied ear handles at the shoulder, and a banded incised chevron frieze encircling the upper body — this is a form drawn from the oldest traditions of utility pottery. Vessels of this proportion and character have been used across South Asia, the Middle East, and the Mediterranean for millennia: for storing grain, oil, and water; for marking boundaries; for standing at the entrance of a home or temple. The Pithos Urn carries all of that association in its silhouette, without literal reference to any single tradition.
The surface is where time is most present. Ochre, charcoal, dark olive, raw sienna, and flashes of weathered teal are layered across the body in a finish that resembles a vessel that has spent decades outdoors — absorbing rain, algae, mineral deposit, and fire. The texture is thick and uneven: in places the surface bubbles and blisters like fired earth; in others it is smooth and worn; in others still, pigment has run and dried in vertical trails. The incised chevron band at the shoulder — a geometric pattern scratched into the clay before firing — catches the layered pigment and darkens within its grooves, reading as something ancient even in its detail.
The teal that appears at intervals across the surface is not a decorative addition. It emerges from the layering process — a colour that surfaces through successive applications and abrasions, as verdigris surfaces on aged bronze or copper. It is present, then absent, then present again as the eye moves around the urn.
This is a vessel for placement, not primarily for planting. Set directly into a garden bed — as photographed here, rising from grass and surrounded by fern and tropical foliage — it becomes an anchor point, a still centre around which the garden moves. It can be planted, but it does not require it.
Each Pithos Urn is hand-finished and entirely unique in its surface distribution. No two will be identical.



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