The Corkman

Delia adds her pottery studio to Main Street

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IT’S unlikely that Castleisla­nd has ever had a serious potter of its own. One who made pots and plates and jugs and mugs for the people of the locality.

The nearest we’ve ever had were ‘earthenwar­e merchants’ Thomas Kearney and John Riordan, both on Main Street, in the late 1800s.

They may well have been potters themselves but they were, most likely, merchants for the merchandis­e of others.

What’s in a name? Potters are often referred to nowadays as ceramicist­s, and a practition­er of that class of craft and talent launched her own studio / shop at Delia’s Pottery Studio at No. 94 Upper Main Street, Castleisla­nd on the Puck Fair-less Monday morning, August 10, 2020 at 10am.

“With the exception of the ceramic jewellery and some hand-built pieces, I wheel-throw most of my work in the traditiona­l way. And I’m very much influenced by the Kerry landscape,” said Delia O’Donoghue the Cullen native and Castleisla­nd resident now about to become the town’s first potter of the 21st century.

“I like to use or reuse things I find around me – or waste products, e.g ashes, wild flowers – and so on in my work.

“The Main Street shop/studio will be an outlet and a base for my work and, hopefully, when I can do it safely, I will also be offering classes for both children and adults in pottery, design, drawing and print making.

“I will also be selling work in the shop by other crafters and artisans including: handmade journals by Diggy’s Journals, Killorglin; crochet by Kelly St John, Listowel; handmade soaps by Ibu Botanicals, Ballybunio­n; handcrafte­d wooden pieces by Denis Lane, Ballybunio­n and by The Old Raven Wood shop, Glenbeigh.”

Finding herself out of a job when the most recent recession hit its depths over a decade ago, Delia thought it’s time she went after one of her long-held ambitions of training in a branch of the arts.

She was busily raising her two children and keeping down an office job until the economy took that remarkable nose-dive.

“I’ve always had an interest in arts and crafts, and studied art to Leaving Cert in Milllstree­t Community School,” said Delia.

“Though I worked in the area of book-keeping for going on 20 years, during that time I was still drawn to art and crafts and attempted various projects as pastimes.

“I began to make jewellery and figurines from polymer clay and, as time went by, I got better at it and loved being able to manipulate and sculpt the clay into whatever shape I wanted.

“When the recession fully kicked in and I went from full time office hours to part time and then none, I decided that this would be as good a time as any to try my hand at getting formal training in arts and crafts.

“I started by doing a portfolio preparatio­n course in Kerry

College of Further Education and then went on to study in Limerick School of Art and Design, receiving my degree in ceramics and design in June 2018.

“Throughout my time in college, my themes tended to be around nature and the Kerry landscape, and my final year was no different as I chose to base my project and subsequent pieces around the Skellig Islands.

“George Bernard Shaw referred to Skellig Michael as the most fantastic and impossible rock in the world in a letter he penned in 1910, and that still holds true today in my opinion.

“As I researched the literature and archaeolog­ical finds from the Skelligs, the one thing that I kept coming back to was the monks’ ability to use their limited resources to survive on this impossible rock.

“I decided to incorporat­e this mentality into my work, using what I could around me to glaze and decorate my pieces.

“The designs and shapes including the concentric circles on the pottery were influenced by the Skelligs and archaeolog­ical finds there,” Delia concluded.

Delia has her own distinctiv­e style of work, and she will gladly accommodat­e anyone who has a design in mind for a once-off piece, whether it be as a gift or as a special-occasion presentati­on.

 ?? Photo by John Reidy ?? Delia O’Donoghue pictured in her ‘Delia’s Pottery Studio’ in the early hours in preparatio­n for Monday morning’s 10am opening at No.94 Upper Main Street, Castleisla­nd.
Photo by John Reidy Delia O’Donoghue pictured in her ‘Delia’s Pottery Studio’ in the early hours in preparatio­n for Monday morning’s 10am opening at No.94 Upper Main Street, Castleisla­nd.

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