This article appears in print in the August 2018 issue. Click here to subscribe.

Located in the garage of her Wallingford house, Timea Tihanyi’s studio may be small, but it’s a place where big ideas are being formed. Like most pottery studios, the workroom, called Slip Rabbit (sliprabbit.org), features many tools commonly found in such studios—a couple of kilns, stations for making molds and casts, a palette of various glazes—but it also contains an unusual one: the 3-D Potterbot 7 ceramic printer.

A former physician, Tihanyi ditched her career in medicine in the late ’90s to pursue ceramics and studied with renowned University of Washington ceramic instructor Akio Takamori, who died last year. Using the 3-D printer, Tihanyi makes otherworldly creations: textured, knobby bowls in soft pastels; vessels with organic shell shapes, as if just washed up from the sea. Her sculptures are the result of the printer, loaded with porcelain clay, interpreting the various mathematical codes fed into it. Some are predictable shapes (such as a cup or a vase) that she’s created before, others aren’t known until they are completed, and still others “unravel in chaos,” Tihanyi says.

Photograph by Hayley Young; Artist Timea Tihanyi oversees a new creation printed from the Potterbot 7 ceramic printer