This commanding contemporary organic sculpture stands out as a museum-quality statement piece, masterfully capturing the raw dialogue between clean geometric contours and textures inspired by the natural world. Rising from an unglazed ovoid body, the hand-built artwork expands into an openwork architectural matrix of intersecting vertical columns and sweeping arches. Heras intentionally breaks the rigidity of the stoneware by enveloping it in a dense, reactive glaze that bubbles into a volcanic, sponge-like skin, echoing deep-sea marine fossils and organic calcifications. By dissolving the boundaries between industrial structure and living biological tissue, the piece transforms spatial vacuum into a felt, multi-sensory encounter custom-tailored for high-end modern art collections.
This earthy series explores the intimate dialogue between body and surface. Handmade sculptures combine geometric or human forms with organic textures inspired by the natural world. Each one of a kind piece plays with contrast: smooth meets rough, structure meets chaos. The artist blurs the line between shape and skin, inviting the viewer to see sculpture as both a form and a felt experience.
Bring a visually majestic and intellectually grounding focal point into; safely buy this unique contemporary organic sculpture by Aniana Heras online.
Contemporary Organic Sculpture - Abisal, 2025. By Aniana Heras
Abisal, 2025
From Sculpted Skin Series
Glazed white stoneware
Dimensions: 9.4 H x 7 W x 7 D in.
Weigh: 1,7 kg
Aniana Heras is a Spanish ceramic sculptor based in Berlin. Born in the countryside of Sigüenza (Guadalajara, Spain) and trained in arts and design in Madrid and Barcelona, she spent over 15 years working as a digital designer before turning to clay in 2022. What began as an experiment quickly became a vital, physical and meditative practice—an anchor to presence and a way to reconnect with the material world.
Largely self-taught, Heras has developed a body of work that is both earthy and conceptually rich. Her handmade, one of a kind sculptures often arise from improvisation, guided by the act of making itself. Through her practice, she explores ideas of timelessness, balance, and contrast—tradition versus innovation, function versus form. Her pieces challenge both material and meaning, drawing inspiration from traditional Spanish pottery, contemporary sculpture, architecture, and design.

















