The Kumbha Urn (Sanskrit for ‘pot’ or ‘vessel’; one of the oldest words for a container in any language; also the name given to the great water-carrying urns of ancient Indian households and temples) is a large, statement terracotta vessel in a classical amphora-like form — tall, full-shouldered, and tapering toward a stepped pedestal base. The neck is narrow and defined, flaring outward at the rim with a rolled lip. The body swells generously at the mid-section before drawing in again at the waist and settling onto the base with quiet authority. It is a form that has appeared in some version across nearly every ancient culture — Greek, Roman, Indian, Persian — because it is, at its core, simply the right shape for a vessel meant to hold and to be seen.

The surface finish is the defining character of this piece. Layers of pale lime wash, ochre pigment, and raw clay are visible simultaneously — not as a designed pattern, but as the accumulated evidence of multiple applications, partial removal, and natural degradation. The texture is uneven and deeply varied: in some areas the wash sits thick and chalky, cracked at the surface like dried earth; in others it has been abraded away to reveal the warm terracotta beneath; in others still, mineral streaking runs vertically down the body, suggesting years of water and weather. No part of the surface reads the same as the part beside it.

This is a pot that looks as though it was made a long time ago and has been standing in a garden ever since. The effect is entirely intentional, and entirely hand-achieved.

The Kumbha Urn is not a planting vessel in the conventional sense. Its narrow neck limits what can be planted within it, though trailing specimens, tall grasses, or a single architectural plant placed at the opening work well. It functions equally — and perhaps more naturally — as a garden object in its own right: a sculptural presence placed among foliage, at the end of a path, in a courtyard corner, or as a singular focal point in a planted composition. The foliage in the photograph is incidental to it. It does not need the plant to complete it.

Available as a single large piece. Each urn is individually finished and will vary in the distribution and tone of its surface.

Weight 50 kg
Dimensions 38 × 94 cm

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Midori — The Garden Studio
A quiet green sanctuary tucked away in a by-lane of Belgaum, Karnataka.

Greenery breathing life into living spaces
Where form, material, and nature coexist

Go ahead, indulge.
Greenery you didn’t plan to fall for

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