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When I watched my grandfather pass away in his home it had a profound impact on my outlook. Home is a place that familiar, average, and routine, and his passing in that environment helped normalize his death and ideas of my own mortality. I wanted to create an art piece that allowed other people to have that same experience – confronting mortality in everyday life.

I began collecting human remains off the Internet from bone dealers who typically sell to medical professionals and oddity collectors. I purchased 200 bones, each formerly belonging to 200 different people.

With a background in ceramics, I knew that bone ash was a common ingredient in glaze so I developed a special recipe using typical ingredients like clay, silica, and feldspar, and added my freshly fired, crushed and powdered human bone ash.

I spent the next 4 months designing and producing an 8-person dinner service. Once it was completed, I coated each piece in my human ash glaze and fired the work in a kiln to 2,400 degrees Fahrenheit, melting the glaze onto the dinnerware. The result was a glossy pale blue glaze covering functional cups, mugs, plates, and bowls. This is where my “Nourish” dinnerware series was born.

To celebrate the completion of the Nourish series, I held a dinner party where I invited guests to dine on wares. I served pork tenderloin, asparagus, and quinoa salad, while my guests discussed their experiences, views on death, and outlook on mortality. The entire glaze-making process and dining experience was documented in a beautiful video.

As I began to tell people about my conceptual dinnerware series, I started to get a surprising request. People began asking me to make custom pieces using their passed loved one’s ashes. Rather than observing a picture or cremation urn on a shelf, they wanted an interactive way to fold the memory of their loved one’s into everyday life. It is a way to keep them close.

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Based on this idea, I launched Chronicle Cremation Designs in October 2016, offering custom memorial objects like coffee mugs, cremation jewelry, luminaries, and more. What began as an art project inspired by tragedy is now a business changing how we think about death and memorization.

More info: cremationdesigns.com

I purchased 200 human bones online from bone dealers each formerly belonging to 200 different people

I knew that bone ash was a common ingredient in glaze so I developed a special recipe and used them in making an 8-person dinner service

Firstly I processed the bones by turning it into a powder

Then I made the dinnerware

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I coated each piece in my human ash glaze and fired the work in a kiln to 2,400 degrees

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The result was a glossy pale blue glaze covering functional cups, mugs, plates, and bowls

To celebrate the completion of the Nourish series, I held a dinner party

After it people began asking me to make custom pieces using their passed loved one’s ashes

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Rather than observing a picture or cremation urn on a shelf, they wanted an interactive way to fold the memory of their loved one’s into everyday life

It is a way to keep them close

Based on this idea, I launched a website, offering custom memorial objects like coffee mugs, cremation jewelry and more

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What began as an art project inspired by tragedy is now a business changing how we think about death and memorization