Charlotte Moore

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Born and raised in the Tamar Valley, Cornwall, her practice is shaped by its post-industrial landscape of mining and agriculture. She examines how human activity drives botanical transformation, focusing on how plant communities reclaim abandoned architectures and terrains, and proposing new forms of human–nature coexistence.

Trained in architecture and working primarily in ceramics, she combines analogue and digital processes within research-led, site-responsive projects. Her work engages local communities and interrogates the ethics of archives, herbariums, and seed banks in the context of climate adaptation and biodiversity preservation. She is currently developing architectural ceramic research for a community seed bank supporting wildfire recovery.

Recent work includes Cornubia Tropicus (WhiteGold Project), exploring ecological shifts in former kaolin quarries in St Austell. The project received a CBG Award for “Use of Clay” and “Cornish Distinctiveness.” She is a recipient of the BLAZE TO BLOOM Award, British Ceramics Biennale 2025–2026.

She holds an MA in Architecture (Distinction) from the Royal College of Art (2019) and a BSc (Hons) in Architecture (First Class Honours) from Cardiff University (2015).