
Pottery for Creatives Looking for a Non-Religious Spiritual Practice
You don’t need a religion to feel connected. You don’t need a label to be spiritual. At The Clay Hole in Draper, Utah, pottery becomes more than just art—it becomes ritual, reflection, and reconnection.
If you’re a seeker, a feeler, a creative who’s walked away from traditional faith but still longs for grounding, presence, and something deeper—this is for you. Pottery is centering, sacred, and slow. It meets you exactly where you are.
Pottery as Practice, Not Performance
- Feel connected to the earth through raw clay and your own hands
- Create your own rhythms, rituals, and meditations
- Step away from screens and into full-body presence
- Engage with a peaceful, inclusive community—no dogma, no pressure
- Experience flow, healing, and deep creative fulfillment
Every week becomes a ceremony of your own design. You shape the clay—and let the clay shape you. We provide the space, the tools, and the freedom. You bring the soul.
“Pottery is my meditation. It’s the only place where I don’t think—I just feel. It’s become my sacred practice.”
— Elle M., member since 2022
Class Schedule
- Monday Morning: 10:30 AM – 2:00 PM
- Monday Evening: 6:30 PM – 10:00 PM
- Tuesday Evening: 6:30 PM – 10:00 PM
- Wednesday Evening: 6:30 PM – 10:00 PM
- Thursday Evening: 6:30 PM – 10:00 PM
- Friday Evening (Singles Night): 6:30 PM – 10:00 PM
What’s Included in Membership
- One 3.5-hour pottery class each week
- 500+ commercial glazes and 100+ underglazes included
- Thousands of pottery tools available—no need to bring your own
- Guidance from 4 instructors per class (2 wheel, 2 hand-building)
- Zero contracts or pressure—freedom to come as you are
Note: Clay and firings are not included in membership and may be purchased in-studio.
Still Have Questions?
Explore our FAQs, text us at 385-241-5528, or message us via our contact page.
View Our FAQsA Different Kind of Sacred in Draper, Utah
The Clay Hole
12896 S Pony Express Rd, Suite 100
Draper, UT, 84020, USA
Learn how ritual and art intersect in secular spiritual practice at On Being.