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Diablo Quartet | Wall Sculpture in Wall Hangings by James Aarons | Kaiser Permanente Redwood City Medical Office in Redwood City. Item made of ceramic
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Diablo Quartet | Wall Sculpture in Wall Hangings by James Aarons | Kaiser Permanente Redwood City Medical Office in Redwood City. Item made of ceramic
Diablo Quartet | Wall Sculpture in Wall Hangings by James Aarons | Kaiser Permanente Redwood City Medical Office in Redwood City. Item made of ceramic

Created and Sold by James Aarons

James Aarons

Diablo Quartet - Wall Hangings

Featured In Kaiser Permanente Redwood City Medical Office, Redwood City, CA

Starts at $4,800

Creation: 8-12 weeks

Diablo, a ceramic painting in four parts, imagines the stony skeleton of Mount Diablo, an earthy monument seen rising in the distance from the panoramic windows of the medical center. Just as we ask our care teams to peer inside of us for structural imbalances, we might look to our planet for hints at how to maintain her balance.

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James Aarons
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2020
Objectify your space!

James Aarons owns a one-person studio specializing in hand-made ceramic art pieces for hospitality, health care, corporate and residential spaces. Most work is created for site specific placement by art consultants, designers and architects. Repertory includes custom designed Dot Compositions in a broad range of colors, textures and styles; ceramic paintings, prints and drawings; and one-of-a-kind objects produced in collaboration with designers and art consultants.


“I am a reformed modern dancer and self-taught ceramic artist who moonlights as a yoga teacher. Dance, clay and yoga share the necessity of exploring space in combination with earthy materials. Plus heat. As if by a gentle stroke of magic, each discipline transforms the ordinary (space, clay and body) into the extraordinary.

My most current ceramic work is a collection of imaginary landscapes drawing upon the physical properties of geomorphic processes. Tectonic shifts, glacial moraines and the erosive forces of rain and wind upon sediment are the incremental movements I look to for inspiration. Additionally, I produce site specific dot compositions; crisp geometric choreographies for vertical surfaces that employ a range of shapes, textures and colors.”