Elsa Foulon Collection - Hera Wall Sconce
by Elsa Foulon
Material
Ceramic
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The Hera Wall Sconce is a ceramic wall light by Elsa Foulon, from the Elsa Foulon Collection, made in her Parisian studio.
The backplate is a hand-formed oval in speckled beige ceramic, its edges irregular and its surface carrying a subtle grain from the glaze. An egg-shaped white glass diffuser is set off-center within the backplate and secured by a small brass knob. The asymmetric placement gives the sconce a quiet animation: the light source appears positioned by intention rather than convention.
Foulon forms and glazes the ceramic backplate by hand. The speckled finish varies with each firing cycle, so no two Hera sconces are identical. The glass diffuser softens the light into a warm, diffuse glow that plays against the textured ceramic surface.
The Hera Wall Sconce reflects Foulon's sustained interest in bringing her ceramic sculpture logic to functional objects, producing a fitting that reads as a compact formal composition as much as a light source.
W 45 x D 20 x H 35 cm
W 17.72 x D 7.87 x H 13.78 in
Materials: Ceramic and brass
About
Elsa Foulon
Elsa Foulon came to ceramics through a different door. The daughter of an antique dealer and later a dealer in 20th-century decorative arts herself, she spent years building a visual archive of objects made with conviction. That accumulation now shapes her approach: ceramic lighting fixtures conceived as sculpture, forms simultaneously free and precise, their sensibility drawn from both artistic instinct and hard-won technique.
The medium resisted the scale she wanted. Large-format ceramic work demands a kind of problem-solving that goes beyond craft, so she developed her own plate technique and proprietary materials, achieving generous volumes without sacrificing the structural lightness her organic forms require. The Antigone series, whose pendant and wall versions seem to float against any surface, is where this technical resolution becomes most visible.
In her Parisian studio, what drives the work is what she calls the beauty of the ancestral gesture: the interval between idea and object, long and never predictable. Fire shapes each piece in its own way. The clay carries the impression of her hands. Light installed inside the hollow of a sculpture reveals, rather than conceals, the roughness of the material.
Her work is presented on Monde Singulier, where signature pieces from the Elsa Foulon Collection include the Venus wall sconce and the Selene pendant.

































