Kapiti News

First potter chosen for residency at The Kilns

Adrienne Riseley takes up legacy project

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Mixed-media artist Adrienne Riseley will be the first resident potter at The Kilns at Te Horo. The Kilns at Te Horo, on the Kāpiti Coast, is about celebratin­g the legacy of the late Mirek Smisek and creating future inspiratio­n.

The unique visitor attraction project centres around internatio­nally recognised ceramic artist Smisek’s handbuilt brick beehive kilns where he created a hub for ceramic art for more than 40 years.

The kilns were carefully dismantled, relocated a short distance away to make way for the

Peka Peka to Ō taki Expressway, and rebuilt as part of the wider kilns project.

Riseley, who originates from Lower Hutt, has lived in Sweden for the past 30 years. With the encouragem­ent of Christine Boswijk, Neil Grant and Michael Trumic, at Otago University School of Art, Riseley fell in love with clay. “In many ways Mirek Smisek’s destiny and mine are similar. “An upheaval from one’s home of birth to a land far, far away and a passion for clay that stretches over decades unites us.”

A blurb about Smisek, on The Kilns at Te Horo website, said he began working with clay in Australia in 1948, after having left his devastated homeland, Czechoslov­akia, at the end of World War II. “Moving to New Zealand in 1951 Mirek joined Crown Lynn Pottery in Auckland where he experiment­ed with freeflowin­g Bohemian decorative vases.

“Leaving behind factory production he moved to Nelson where by 1956 he became New Zealand’s first fulltime independen­t studio potter.

“In the 1960s he worked a year at the Leach Pottery in England and studied in Japan.

“Smisek was influenced by the Leach Ango-Japanese ascetic then proceeded to develop his own distinctiv­e forms.

“Smisek was awarded an OBE in recognitio­n of his work in 1990 and in 2008 the Czech Government presented him with the Medal of the Senate for his contributi­ons to Czech culture.”

Riseley was a finalist for the Portage Ceramic Awards in 2005 and 2006 and has had solo exhibition­s and work included in exhibition­s in Wellington, The Dowse Gallery in Lower Hutt, Auckland, and at leading galleries in Sweden, Finland and Baltimore in the United States.

For the past 15 years, Riseley has been teaching at Kulturskol­a Arts School and has been creating art with a range of materials.

She has recently returned to working with clay.

Auckland-based ceramicist Peter Lange, one of the assessors of applicants for the residency, was impressed by Riseley’s inquiring approach to clay which embraces a range of techniques and processes.

“Adrienne is clearly not afraid to use original ideas and technical ‘inventions’.

“Her sculptural works are convincing and accomplish­ed.”

He also said “her teaching skills and ability to encourage community involvemen­t are ideal for this position”.

Riseley will be moving into the renovated Te Horo Railway Station with husband Fredrik Randers.

She will take up the residency in November.

 ?? ?? Adrienne Riseley is the first resident potter at The Kilns at Te Horo.
Adrienne Riseley is the first resident potter at The Kilns at Te Horo.
 ?? ?? Mirek Smisek.
Mirek Smisek.

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