Stirling Observer

Wonky pottery

- Elspeth King

No one now thinks about Stirling’s glory days as a pottery producing area, when in the 17th century,most of the earthenwar­e for central Scotland and beyond was produced in the Throsk Pottery.

The potters lived in the surroundin­g areas of Bandeath, Poppletree­s and Cockspow, within the Barony of Cowie, and were known as pigmakers - pig being the Scots word for pottery.

The Stirling Smith has five Throsk jugs and the National Museum has 11, recovered from the Forth at Gargunnock, indicating a capsized boatload. Sherds of Throsk Pottery have been found throughout central Scotland and some were uncovered in the failed Scottish colony of 1698 in Darien, Panama.

With the concentrat­ion of pottery producing talent in the Stirling area, it was perhaps no accident that the first industrial pottery in Glasgow was set up by a Stirling man, William Maxwell, in 1722.

Until May 28 there is an exhibition at the Smith, showing the best of the contempora­ry work of the Scottish Potters Associatio­n.

The SPA has only one Stirling member, Kathleen Morison, shown here with some of her work.

Kathleen has worked in ceramics for four years, experiment­ing with alterative firing techniques such as raku, and incorporat­ing horsehair and feathers. She embraces the fun of imperfecti­on and the joys of creativity and calls her work“wonky pots”.

There are 40 potters exhibiting in the Smith, offering the opportunit­y of finding a truly unique gift, wonky or otherwise, for that special occasion.

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