Ceramics are hot right now.
This month's Auckland Festival of Ceramics has more than 60 events on its programme, including coach tours, workshops, walks, expert talks, collectors' clinics, open studios and markets.
Classes at the Auckland Society of Potters are booked out; at Te Tuhi Gallery in Pakuranga, Ruby White (aka Miss Changy) is serving up Chinese-Malaysian inspired food on her own bespoke dinnerware and the Portage Ceramic Awards are showcasing 54 pieces by some of our most inventive artists working with clay.
But an exhibition that complements the annual Portage awards shows that New Zealand ceramics has a longer and livelier history than we may imagine. Curated by Moyra Elliott, Leading Ladies looks at five female potters who were working in the early 20th century: Briar Gardner, Elizabeth Matheson, Minnie F White, Olive Jones and Elizabeth Lissaman.
As the exhibition notes, most histories of NZ studio pottery begin in the mid-20th century but here were a group of women making - surprisingly contemporary-looking - pottery several decades before, possibly influenced by the British Arts and Crafts movement.