'Milk Thief' - Blue Tit Ceramic Milk Bottle Sculpture

Jon Williams

From £70.00 Delivery included

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  1. Item price £0
  2. Extras £0
  3. Personalisation £0
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  1. order_approve
    • Order placed
    • 4th December
  2. local_shipping
    • Dispatched
    • 9th December
  3. mail
    • Standard delivery
    • 11th - 12th December

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  • Made in UK
  • Handmade
Description

"Milk Thief" - Bluetit sat on a milk bottle.

For an additional cost your Milk thief can be delivered in an attractive wicker picnic basket. Please select from the drop down product options.

Need to know

Small: 6 x 12 x 4cm
Large: 10 x 19 x 8cm

Porcelain

Delivery

The delivery options for this item are listed below (if it doesn't state 'Express delivery' then that option is not available for this product). As soon as you place your order, this small business will spring into action, get it ready and send it out... (and you can feel wonderful for supporting them).

Delivery options available

Standard delivery: included
Receive it by 11th - 12th December

For more information about delivery or returning items, please take a look at our Delivery & Returns page.

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Jon Williams

London

Following a BA from Wolverhampton in 2000, Jon established his practice through exhibiting within the UK, ceramic festivals in Mino Japan, Shaanxi China and at the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee at Buckingham Palace. Awarded with a scholarship from The Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust, he graduated with an MA from The Royal College of Art in 2014, specialising in ceramics. Most recently, Jon has raised funds for NHS Charities, responding to the UK Lockdown in throwing one hundred decorated, porcelain tea bowls, one of which was acquired by The Museum of London, in documenting the response of London to the Covid pandemic.

‘In making, there is a tipping point that I am looking for, the moment where a character becomes relatable. Through this, each work becomes a vessel, recording narrative and the energy of making. I’m interested in how time becomes a hand in my work, as it does in materials such as stone or clay. The idea of capturing a fragile, transitory state, which may be read in the hereafter.’