Skip to product information
  • A Snake Amphora Vase by Pearce Williams with a unique design featuring a realistic green and yellow painted snake wrapping around its neck and handle against a plain white background in the style of decorative arts ceramics.
  • A collection of colorful, whimsical hand-made ceramics including sea creatures and abstract Snake Amphora Vases by Pearce Williams, displayed alongside wooden elements and plants.
  • Snake Amphora Vase with a unique design featuring two intertwined green handles on a plain white background, crafted as part of the decorative arts ceramics collection by Pearce Williams.
  • Pearce Williams Snake Amphora Vase with a realistic green snake sculpture wrapped around it, set against a plain white background.
  • Close-up of a glazed stoneware Snake Amphora Vase with a textured finish, featuring a sculpted green snake with red tongue wrapped around its neck by Pearce Williams.
  • A glazed stoneware vase featuring a Snake Amphora Vase design wrapped around its neck, with a bird of paradise flower inserted at the top by Pearce Williams.
1 of 6

Snake Amphora Vase

Regular price $900
Regular price Sale price $900
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Glazed stoneware amphora vase with a snake coiled around the base, creating two handles. Each piece is unique and made by hand in New Orleans.

  • Color: White and Green
  • Material: 100% glazed stoneware
  • Approximate measurements: 13" H x 9" W x 8" D

For packages exceeding a weight of 10 lb. or large items requiring special handling such as ceramics, we will contact the customer to provide a shipping quote and discuss the customer’s preferred method of shipment. For expedited shipping options, please reach out to us and we will provide a quote.

Pearce Williams is a multi-disciplinary artist with a background in fine art and textiles. Working out of a backyard studio in the Seventh Ward of New Orleans, she creates one-of-a-kind glazed stoneware ceramics using traditional materials and methods. Referencing the history of decorative arts, these works present themselves as irreverent characters — playful, exuberant forms that reflect Pearce's curiosity and fascination with the wild, weird landscape of daily life.