Ceramic characters, every with their very own whimsical allure, gaze from varied angles in Rami Kim’s studio. Constructed by hand, their faces emerge from planters, ceramic dishes and slip-cast mugs just like the solid of an animated Hayao Miyazaki film. On a shelf, a custom-made canine figurine — a consumer’s beloved terrier — lies on its abdomen atop a lilac-colored butter dish. Close by, a retriever, in a seated place, rests on a lady’s head.
“I like the thought of giving life to the objects I create,” Kim stated, standing in her storage studio. “They’re my imaginary buddies.”
On this collection, we spotlight impartial makers and artists, from glassblowers to fiber artists, who’re creating unique merchandise in and round Los Angeles.
A few of her sculptures have names, every a tribute to the inspiration behind them. There’s the Penelope desk lamp, the place a mysterious, nearly melancholy face base is adorned with a glass globe. And there’s Gus, Kim’s beloved white Maltese, who was her fixed companion for 17 years till his loss of life in 2023.
“I spent my 20s, 30s and a part of my 40s with Gus,” she stated softly earlier than including, “I miss him.”
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Kim was sculpting a life-size Gus lamp at her work desk the opposite day when a smile all of the sudden illuminated her face. With every element of his fluffy coat, she appeared to be acknowledging the canine who introduced her a lot pleasure, infusing the lamp with the identical heat and happiness as her fixed companion.




“Individuals wish to have one thing useful that they’ll use day-after-day,” Kim stated of her character-driven works.
“Gus was my household,” stated the 43-year-old artist as she painted the canine’s eyes and nostril. “He was a candy boy with a mild character. In the course of the pandemic, it was so useful to have him close to me when life was so unsure.”
Born and raised in Seoul, Kim studied character animation on the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts). After incomes a grasp of wonderful arts from the UCLA Animation Workshop, she secured a job as a background painter for Nickelodeon’s “Dora the Explorer” and the impartial animation firm July Movies, the place she labored on her former CalArts professor Mike Nguyen’s 2D-animated function movie “My Little World.”
Gus accompanied her.

“I wish to make work that individuals can contact and maintain,” stated Kim, a former animator.
Kim smiled, remembering how her colleagues embraced Gus. “I’d carry him to work with me day-after-day,” she recalled. “All people favored to greet him and was so completely happy to see him. He would sit underneath my desk on his canine mattress whereas I labored on the laptop.”
Kim was nonetheless working in animation when she first tried ceramics at Ball Clay Studio in Highland Park, which is now closed. “I began making these little collectible figurines as a product for stop-motion animation,” she stated, holding two floating faces. The transition from the digital world to the tactile strategy of ceramics was a turning level in her creative journey.



A choice of works inside Kim’s ceramics studio close to La Crescenta.
“I nonetheless bear in mind once I first touched the clay,” Kim stated. “I used to be like, ‘Oh, my God. I have to hold doing this.’ I beloved working with my arms. The chances appeared infinite. I simply knew that I’d be doing ceramics for the remainder of my life, as I’d by no means get tired of it. And I get bored simply.”
It grew from there.
Coming from an animation background, the place she realized the artwork of bringing characters to life, Kim stated she “all the time wished to create characters in a unique kind. That’s how I give life to my ceramic creations.”

Including faces to her vessels made Kim really feel just like the items “now have a life.”
She began to show her natural vessels into faces, full with eyes and lips. “That made me really feel like they’d a personality,” she stated. “The sculptures now have a life.”
When she grew weary of sitting at a pc all day lengthy doing animation, Kim determined to pursue ceramics full time, figuring out of a studio in Atwater Village and later a storage studio subsequent to her rental residence close to La Crescenta.
Nguyen, her former CalArts professor, isn’t stunned to listen to she has an emotional attachment to the characters she creates.
“We as people are very a lot taken with every others essences, ideas and emotions,” he stated in an e-mail. “Character-driven work is one focus side of the general experiences of being alive. It isn’t essentially coming immediately from her work as an animator, however from the folks she has met, the buddies in her life and her household.”

A ceramic residence depicts Kim and her canine, Gus.
With folks frightened a couple of attainable recession, Kim has seen clients hesitate to spend cash on her works, which price between $50 for a mug to $1,800 for a custom-made lamp. So she began creating customized animal collectible figurines for shoppers, a lot of whom, like her, have misplaced their pets. “Individuals share their tales in regards to the previous,” she stated of the method. “They share pictures of their pet and inform me their favourite poses, which helps me sculpt them. I really feel like I do know the pets. It’s very particular.”
Eileen O’Dea — who commissioned Kim to design a figurine of her late canine, Owen, a combined pup she discovered on the road close to her West L.A. woodshop — talked in regards to the profound emotional resonance of Kim’s work. “It’s the form of object that blurs the road between magnificence and reminiscence,” O’Dea stated of the butter dish Kim made her. “It appears identical to him; even his floppy ear is ideal. Each time I exploit it, I’m reminded of him.”
One other buyer ordered two customized collectible figurines as a present for her sister who had simply accomplished nursing college on the age of 60. “Her canines had helped her get by it,” Kim stated. “It was such a touching story to be part of.”


“Hopefully Gus is operating round with different canines having a very good time,” Kim stated of her late canine, Gus.
The tactile nature of her work is one thing she hopes to share with others. “I wish to create work that individuals can get pleasure from and contact and maintain,” she stated, including, “I hope my work provides folks a heat feeling.”
Sure, it’s laborious working for your self, she stated, however Kim likes the pliability of with the ability to work anytime she needs or take a time off to wander a museum or see a film. Nevertheless, after she relocated her studio from Atwater Village, the place she shared area with different artists, to her residence in La Crescenta, she admitted to feeling remoted.
“I miss having a neighborhood and visiting with studio mates. I really feel like I study a lot from different folks. That’s why I host workshops right here in my studio,” stated Kim, who enjoys instructing. “As an impartial artist working alone, it’s robust as a result of I don’t wish to work an excessive amount of within the wholesale enterprise as a result of then I would want a workforce and extra orders, after which I must function like a manufacturing facility.”

“It makes me completely happy when folks share tales about their pets with me,” Kim stated.


Kim’s means to seize the distinctive character of every pet in her ceramics supplies solace to shoppers who’ve misplaced their pets. (Rami Kim )
Nonetheless, she will be able to’t see herself going again to laptop work. “I’ll by no means get tired of this,” she stated. “I can do that till I’m 90. I’m having a lot enjoyable.”
Kim’s understanding of the consolation her ceramics present to these grieving the lack of a pet isn’t just skilled however deeply private. She has skilled it herself in her studio, residence and backyard, the place she is surrounded by the “buddies” that she has created.
“Once I put the Gus lamp on a desk in my front room, it looks like he’s sitting subsequent to me,” she stated. “He’s everlasting now.”