Penélope Vallejo was seven years old when she began making pottery as a hobby and realised that she could create pieces relating to the nature that surrounded her in Santa María de Palautordera, a Catalan town in the Montseny Nature Park. At the age of 28, while working as a quality control engineer, she determined that this was not the path she wanted to follow and left her job to devote herself to pottery. Her first degree in Food Industries Engineering had given her a good grounding in Chemistry and Physics, which turned out to be very useful in ceramics. But she wanted a more formal training so went back to study a degree in Fine Arts and attended courses related to her new discipline. She opened her workshop in 2007 and began creating utilitarian pieces. Today she also makes ornamental ceramics, holds workshops and owns a pottery shop. “This ancestral trade connects us with something intimate and basic,” she says, convinced that it has offered her an opportunity to unite sciences with art. “Joining my technical with my artistic side is my challenge and purpose”.
Penélope Vallejo