

Burgundy and
the Wabi-sabi spirit
Anchored in the calm of a small Burgundy village, in Moloy, MoLoï Ceramics draws its inspiration from the Japanese wabi-sabi spirit, where rawness becomes beauty, and imperfection, presence. The name itself, Mo Loï, draws an unexpected bridge between these two worlds: the French roots of a peaceful place and the Japanese resonance that evokes the fragile, the delicate, the breakable - like the pieces, both rough and vulnerable.
In each creation, the earth dialogues with the memory of the materials: bark, wood, raw textures that recall African resonances, and the imperfect softness of the gesture. Here, imperfection becomes poetry, emptiness dialogues with matter, and balance is born between strength and delicacy.
Between the land of Burgundy, the echoes of Japan and the traces of Africa, MoLoï weaves an organic link, connecting local craftsmanship to a universal vision of raw beauty.

About
Trained in Fine Arts in graphic design, nourished by years of artistic direction and international image production, I shape the earth today as I have always shaped images: in search of contrasts, textures, raw emotions.
From film sets to ceramics workshops, each experience has shaped my perspective and refined my style, blending ethnic influences gleaned from South Africa and Asia with a contemporary aesthetic.
It was in Burgundy, alongside Emmanuel Chevrel and Denis Castaing, that I established my practice, transforming a passion into a total commitment. This is where MoLoï Ceramics was born, a space of exploration where I create sculptural pieces, totems, and organic forms, playing with the dialogue between rough and smooth, between mastery and letting go.
MoLoï Ceramics lives to the rhythm of small collections, unique pieces shaped slowly, without overproduction, with attention paid to local materials and the right technique.
Each sale is an encounter, each piece a unique story to bring into your daily life.

Trained in Fine Arts in graphic design, nourished by years of artistic direction and international image production, I shape the earth today as I have always shaped images: in search of contrasts, textures, raw emotions.
From film sets to ceramics workshops, each experience has shaped my perspective and refined my style, blending ethnic influences gleaned from South Africa and Asia with a contemporary aesthetic.
It was in Burgundy, alongside Emmanuel Chevrel and Denis Castaing, that I established my practice, transforming a passion into a total commitment. This is where MoLoï Ceramics was born, a space of exploration where I create sculptural pieces, totems, and organic forms, playing with the dialogue between rough and smooth, between mastery and letting go.
MoLoï Ceramics lives to the rhythm of small collections, unique pieces shaped slowly, without overproduction, with attention paid to local materials and the right technique.
Each sale is an encounter, each piece a unique story to bring into your daily life.