index

Porfírio Mendes

Curiosity, mischievousness and raw talent shaped Porfírio Mendes into the folk  cork sculpture he is today, without ever stepping foot in a formal art school. Born in 1967 in Barcelos, Porfírio began working in construction at 14 and ended up building the house where he currently lives. From that, he began sculpting miniature stone buildings with intricate mechanics that gave a whimsical touch to his neighborhood, but it was only in 2013 that he stumbled upon cork as a raw material for the creations that would make him one of a kind.

He began collecting bottle corks from restaurants and built roosters, devils, saints, witches, you name it, using nothing but a knife, sandpaper and glue. Well, and paint of course - have you looked at the extravagant colours? It’s a naive and humorous work of amusement and nostalgia, an homage to the region’s folk imagery.

Family is always by his side: his daughter Adriana curates his online presence and his wife is a lifelong partner. Porfírio’s first solo exhibition, held at Barcelos’s Tourist Office in 2024, named him “a craftsman of soul and heart”. He still works in construction.



Discover this producer's products

Learn more

Cesar Teixeira

César Teixeira was born in 1969 in Gondar, a small village in Amarante, where he still lives and works. At 18, he became an apprentice to master potter Manuel Teixeira, learning two rare ancestral techniques he never abandoned: the low, horizontal, and the soenga.

Read More
O Genuíno Cobertor de Papa

Céu Reis was born in Guarda and grew up in the village of Maçainhas, where winters were harsh, but also warm. How? She covered herself with the thick, waterproof traditional wool blankets that her mother and neighbours handwove.

Read More
António Ramalho

A ceramic artist and heir to one of the central families of the Barcelos figurative tradition, António Ramalho continues to produce handmade works that extend the legacy of Rosa Ramalho and Júlia Ramalho, two major figures in Portuguese folk ceramics.

Read More