Exhibition Opening
Friday 23 November, 6pm - 8pmYou are invited to join Objectspace to celebrate the opening of two new exhibitions, 'Elizabeth Lissaman: the Art of Pottery' and 'Ex Libris'. For more information on 'Ex Libris' click here
Marlborough-born Elizabeth Lissaman made her first pot in 1920 and her last in 1990 while a resident at Crathie rest home in Tauranga. She was New Zealand’s pioneer studio potter, designing, throwing, decorating, firing and selling her earthenware pottery continuously for almost 70 years. Lissaman received no formal tertiary education and carried out her work alone while living in rural parts of the country. Through experimentation and determination, she honed the creative, technical and marketing skills needed to successfully craft and sell pottery in times of economic restraint during the Depression and the Second World War.
Lissaman’s work is not widely known yet her impact alongside other female potters of her generation including Briar Gardner and Olive Jones demonstrates her commitment to forging a serious and entirely unique ceramic practice. As an independent thinker, Lissaman defended her right to decorate her work as she wished. She rejected calls for New Zealand potters to develop a distinctively typical style. I hope they don’t,” she wrote in 1969, “we are a small nation of individualists who strive, on our own, to develop arts which satisfy something within ourselves.”
She was inspired by developments in international decorative arts. Between the 1920s and the late 1940s, she linked into the art deco movement sweeping the Western world, creating brightly coloured domestic ware in modern shapes. Decorated with Middle Eastern motifs and native and exotic Australasian flora and fauna, her wide range of bowls, jugs, vases and plates found ready buyers. From the 1950s when pottery in New Zealand flourished as a protected industry and many potters began to make stoneware, she produced monochromatic and striped mid-century modern earthenware. For her last 20 years, from the 1970s, she returned to making colourful figurative pottery especially plaques, or wall plates, decorated with whimsical birds.
Elizabeth Lissaman: The Art of Pottery draws extensively from private collections throughout New Zealand. The exhibition is curated by Jane Vial with exhibition design by Micheal McCabe. It coincides with the launch of a major Rim Books publication on Elizabeth Lissaman by Jane Vial with an essay by Steve Austin and photographs by Haru Sameshima.
You are invited to join Objectspace to celebrate the opening of two new exhibitions, 'Elizabeth Lissaman: the Art of Pottery' and 'Ex Libris'. For more information on 'Ex Libris' click here
Marlborough-born Elizabeth Lissaman made her first pot in 1920 and her last in 1990 while a resident at Crathie rest home in Tauranga. She was New Zealand’s pioneer studio potter, designing, throwing, decorating, firing and selling her earthenware pottery continuously for almost 70 years. Lissaman received no formal tertiary education and carried out her work alone while living in rural parts of the country. Through experimentation and determination, she honed the creative, technical and marketing skills needed to successfully craft and sell pottery in times of economic restraint during the Depression and the Second World War.
Lissaman’s work is not widely known yet her impact alongside other female potters of her generation including Briar Gardner and Olive Jones demonstrates her commitment to forging a serious and entirely unique ceramic practice. As an independent thinker, Lissaman defended her right to decorate her work as she wished. She rejected calls for New Zealand potters to develop a distinctively typical style. I hope they don’t,” she wrote in 1969, “we are a small nation of individualists who strive, on our own, to develop arts which satisfy something within ourselves.”
She was inspired by developments in international decorative arts. Between the 1920s and the late 1940s, she linked into the art deco movement sweeping the Western world, creating brightly coloured domestic ware in modern shapes. Decorated with Middle Eastern motifs and native and exotic Australasian flora and fauna, her wide range of bowls, jugs, vases and plates found ready buyers. From the 1950s when pottery in New Zealand flourished as a protected industry and many potters began to make stoneware, she produced monochromatic and striped mid-century modern earthenware. For her last 20 years, from the 1970s, she returned to making colourful figurative pottery especially plaques, or wall plates, decorated with whimsical birds.
Elizabeth Lissaman: The Art of Pottery draws extensively from private collections throughout New Zealand. The exhibition is curated by Jane Vial with exhibition design by Micheal McCabe. It coincides with the launch of a major Rim Books publication on Elizabeth Lissaman by Jane Vial with an essay by Steve Austin and photographs by Haru Sameshima.