The Devil is a flawed everyman in Nick Cave’s ceramics
A show of Nick Cave’s ceramics, ‘The Devil – A Life’ at Xavier Hufkens in Brussels, explores the complex character

In musician and artist Nick Cave’s ceramics, the devil is a flawed individual, blessed and cursed with human weaknesses. In his 17 figurines, Cave traces the fluctuations of a life punctuated by a series of defining events, an artistic echo of Shakespeare’s ‘seven ages of man’. ‘What started as a desire to create a single small devil figure as a vehicle for an intense red glaze became a journey towards some kind of absolution from a series of shattering events,’ says Cave of the ceramic artworks, which encapsulate both an artistic and religious struggle (and follow previous ceramics such as a Nick Cave egg cup).
Nick Cave’s ceramics see a Devil who wants to be better
Devil Awakens, 2020-24
Cave’s Devil falls in love, goes to war, fights a lion. We follow his journey from innocence to experience, yet Cave rejects William Blake’s characterisation, also eschewing the figure in Milton’s Paradise Lost and Christopher Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus. Here, the Devil does bad things, but he wants to be better, and is tormented by remorse and guilt.
The figures themselves reference the pieces that populated the mantelpieces of Victorian Britain. Dating from the 1740s, figurines were created in large numbers between 1837 and 1900, and were frequently made by children. Dubbed ‘flatbacks’ due to their tendency to only be decorated on the visible front and sides, Cave’s versions are rich in colour and symbolism, with monkeys, dogs, rabbits, snakes and skulls drawn alongside red, black and white horses.
Devil in Remorse, 2020-24
In ‘Devil in Remorse’, Cave himself sits, head in hands, the flawed figure we have seen throughout. For the artist, this project has been a personal one. ‘This [the ceramic works] – and in fact, all the songs that I write – are about the idea of forgiveness, the idea that there is a moral virtue in beauty. It’s a kind of balancing of our sins.’
Nick Cave, 'The Devil – A Life' takes place from 5 April – 11 May 2024 at Xavier Hufkens in Brussels
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Hannah Silver is the Art, Culture, Watches & Jewellery Editor of Wallpaper*. Since joining in 2019, she has overseen offbeat design trends and in-depth profiles, and written extensively across the worlds of culture and luxury. She enjoys meeting artists and designers, viewing exhibitions and conducting interviews on her frequent travels.
-
This David Lynch auction offers a rare glimpse into the late filmmaker's life
From movie memorabilia to everyday items, the sale – taking place in Los Angeles 18 June – is one not to miss
-
Inside Loewe’s high-shine pop-up at Harrods, marking 10 colourful years of the Puzzle bag
Loewe’s best-known handbag celebrates turning ten with a jewel box-like pop-up and eclectic array of reissues at London’s Harrods (plus, a spotted Loewe coffee van)
-
Lucifer Lighting's fixtures are designed to ‘define and disappear’
‘The best lighting is the kind that no one notices,’ says Gilbert Mathews, founder of the Texas-based lighting company. Here, he speaks to Wallpaper* on its latest fixture Stellaris after its debut at Milan Design Week