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Poetry in Pottery

The aim is to share the calming, tactile power of clay with one thousand people Every art form has a stage. Pottery lost its. What happens when an ancient craft has nowhere left to stand?

Why do people say that plunging bare hands into wet earth is the best form of therapy? There is a sharp, startling feeling when skin presses into cold mud. The clay we throw today holds thousands of years of history, yet we live in an age of glass screens and non-stop notifications. We always hear people call the wheel a form of therapy, and researchers actually see the proof happening in real time.

Kneading wet earth actively drops cortisol levels in the brain. It triggers the vagus nerve, telling an exhausted, panicked nervous system to simply power down and find real quiet. All the while, the concrete of our growing cities keeps paving over our heritage spaces. The gifted creators who spent their lives keeping our history alive are left dealing with a forced silence, losing the physical spaces they need to practise their craft. In response, shaping mud feels like an act of preservation. The wheel asks an exhausted brain to finally sit still, tying us to our roots and anchoring us in the present. This need for physical reality pulses vividly through Potters’ Hub, a collaborative workspace tucked away in Gurgaon. Conceived by Ranu Kawatra and later joined by Shantanu Prakash, a ceramicist with nearly twenty years of dedication to the wheel, the studio operates as a twenty-four-hour safe space.  Built purely for the love of the craft, it functions as a shared haven where creators mould their lives around art.

Knowing the calming effect of the wheel, the duo launched a community mission to help one thousand everyday people touch clay. The sight inside is genuinely moving: corporate professionals tentatively shaping their very first, wonderfully lopsided teapots. In a few months, nearly nine hundred individuals have stepped up to the wheel, discovering the joy of unguided creation. Shantanu even uses this tactile medium to guide corporate leaders through complex problem-solving.

The romance of the studio quickly gives way to a rigorous, fascinating science. The earth sets its own timeline, making the crafting of a single ceramic vessel a three-week lesson in waiting. Raw material must be wedged heavily to push out air bubbles before it is centred on the wheel. A freshly formed bowl must sit untouched for five days to dry. During the initial bisque firing, the kiln burns at a thousand degrees Celsius for twelve hours. The mud hardens into a porous shell. After a slow cooling period, the piece gets a delicate coat of glaze before braving a second firing, where heat melts earthy compounds into a glass finish. Working with clay teaches you very quickly that the material sets the schedule, because pushing the mud too hard on the wheel causes the wet walls to slump right into a messy puddle, and cutting corners during the drying phase means the intense heat of the kiln will crack your work into pieces. The payoff for all that required patience hits you the moment you open the door and pull out a glossy ceramic bowl where a grey block of dirt used to be, and holding a heavy coffee cup that you built from scratch gives you a very specific kind of pride that makes the long wait entirely worth it. 

To shape clay is to give a physical voice to gifted creators who currently have zero stage left to stand on. Sinking your hands into the mud remains a beautifully defiant act, a lasting reminder of the grace found in slowing down, coaxing life from a humble void, and understanding the true poetry in pottery.

Pottery Passion

Handcrafted ceramic bowls showcase the beauty of pottery, where simple clay is transformed through skill, creativity and firing into functional works of art.

Participants immerse themselves in the tactile art of pottery, shaping clay by hand during a creative workshop that blends craftsmanship, mindfulness and self-expression, transforming simple earth into unique art.

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