HOMO FABER 2026
Balázs Botos
©All rights reserved
Balázs Botos
©All rights reserved
Balázs Botos
©All rights reserved
Balázs Botos
©All rights reserved
Balázs Botos
©All rights reserved
Balázs Botos
©All rights reserved

Balázs Botos

Botoshka

Ceramics

Budapest, Hungary

Recommended by Judit Osvárt

Ceramics of contrasts

  • Balázs is primarily inspired by Nordic design
  • After studying industrial design, he became fascinated by ceramics
  • His work is characterised by a play of contrasts

Balázs Botos originally studied design and jewellery, and started working with porcelain around graduation. Since 2018 he has been a key figure in Hungarian contemporary ceramic art. His work is a combination of simplicity and a complex, conceptual artistic vision. For example, his Iceland jewellery collection is both impactful and elegant, drawing attention to both the evident and hidden challenges of climate change. Balázs' work often revolves around the balance between opposing themes, such as playfulness and thoughtfulness, regular shapes and irregular decorations, or juxtapositions of flat and rough surfaces. Balázs is now planning to expand his activities into furniture and object design. In a sense, he may be turning once more to his origins as an industrial designer.

Balázs Botos is an expert artisan: he began his career in 2012.

INTERVIEW

It was extruded porcelain letters. I am still sitting with the idea and I will definitely come back to it.

The first time I saw that people were really attracted to my objects, I could say that they fell in love with them at first sight. It was the first time I felt I had achieved what I wanted to do: to bring a little joy into people's homes and lives.

If it is doing more than just fulfilling a function. You can drink water from a jar, but you have little pleasure. To touch a cup, to look at it, to drink from it. A good object offers something beyond the functional and aesthetic experience, such as discovery, adventure.

Movies, books, travels and exhibitions inspire me, and interestingly, I am very inspired by old children's toys. This might sound a bit sentimental, but I think that these objects evoke fantastic feelings and thoughts in people.