Button & Thread Incense Stand by Sascha Mallon

$58.00

*Each work is a unique artwork.

Button & Thread Incense Stand by Sascha Mallon is a tender, playful object created for everyday ritual. Hand-built in ceramic, the piece features a slender incense holder wrapped in delicate, thread-like coils, anchored to a softly glazed base. Small, button-shaped ceramic forms gather alongside it, evoking keepsakes, offerings, or fragments quietly kept close.

Subtle tones of cream, lavender, warm clay, and orange form a gentle visual rhythm shaped by touch and fire. Both functional and sculptural, Button & Thread Incense Stand transforms the simple act of lighting incense into a moment of pause—inviting care, attentiveness, and a sense of quiet companionship.

*Each work is a unique artwork.

Button & Thread Incense Stand by Sascha Mallon is a tender, playful object created for everyday ritual. Hand-built in ceramic, the piece features a slender incense holder wrapped in delicate, thread-like coils, anchored to a softly glazed base. Small, button-shaped ceramic forms gather alongside it, evoking keepsakes, offerings, or fragments quietly kept close.

Subtle tones of cream, lavender, warm clay, and orange form a gentle visual rhythm shaped by touch and fire. Both functional and sculptural, Button & Thread Incense Stand transforms the simple act of lighting incense into a moment of pause—inviting care, attentiveness, and a sense of quiet companionship.

Sascha Mallon is an Austria-born artist based in Beacon, New York, whose practice spans ceramics, drawing, installation, and textile techniques. Her work has been exhibited internationally across the United States, Europe, and Taiwan, with recent exhibitions at Austrian Cultural Forum New York (New York) and Kentler International Drawing Space (New York), where she created immersive installations combining wall painting and porcelain elements.

Rooted in fairy tales from her childhood—particularly the symbolic worlds of the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen—Mallon’s work uses gentle, intimate forms to explore complex emotional and ethical states. Influenced by landscapes that hold both beauty and unease, her practice reflects care, vulnerability, and transformation. Alongside ceramics, she incorporates crochet and other craft traditions, connecting her work to slow, embodied knowledge. Her Buddhist practice further informs an ethic of interconnectedness, impermanence, and compassion, shaping works that are deeply personal yet resonant with shared human experience.