This pedestal bowl stands 8.5 inches in height with a 10.25-inch diameter at the rim and a 5.25-inch circular base. Formed as a single continuous piece, the bowl rises from a saturated cobalt foot into a wide, flared basin. The silhouette is stable and open — a grounded base supporting an expansive upper plane.
Color is embedded within the glass itself. Bands of red, yellow, and blue move in elongated swirls through the body, creating directional motion across the curved surface. The pattern is neither symmetrical nor random; it reads as pulled color, stretched and wrapped during formation. Light penetrates the translucent fields, intensifying saturation along thicker passages and softening where the glass thins near the rim.
Within gathering design, this piece operates as a focal mass. Its scale and chromatic density anchor a surface, whether holding citrus, florals, or remaining unfilled as a sculptural center. As part of the stewarded collection, it introduces movement and concentrated color into environments otherwise defined by restraint — functioning as a deliberate counterpoint rather than ornament.


