Whangarei Heads Arts Trail
  • Home
  • Artists
    • Guest Artists for 2020
    • Painters >
      • Glenys Ballantyne
      • Gaynor Nairn
      • Kathryn Millard
      • Kathy Mortimer
      • Leslie Cleary
      • Sheryl O'Gorman
      • Trish Parkin
    • Textiles >
      • Helen Copplestone
      • Jill Greig
      • Lucy Bilyard
      • Michelle Devine
    • Glass Art >
      • Justin Culina
      • Shona Firman
    • Sculpture >
      • Amie Redpath
    • Jewellers >
      • Maike Barteldres
      • Adriana Hendel
      • Cheryl Bond
      • Gabrielle Ashton
      • Glass People
      • Michael Steinmetz
    • Photography >
      • Alan Squires
      • Wendy Bown
      • Shelly Linehan
      • Adrian Wilkins
    • Pottery >
      • Jeanette King
      • Sheila Blackburn
      • Allen Jowitt
      • Anna Scott-Davidson
    • Printmakers >
      • Dulcie Hering
    • Mosaics >
      • Anni Veart-Smith
    • Multi-media >
      • Anastasia Parmson
      • Kym Marsden
      • Mariette Van Zuydam
      • Pauline Marjoribanks
      • Sharon Thompson
      • Trisha Fisk
    • Wood Craft >
      • Bob Langford
      • Craig Vaughan
      • Dave Bigelow
      • Don Grimwood
    • Metal Art >
      • Jeff Andrews
  • Events
    • See Past Exhibitions
  • Great Places to eat and sleep
  • What you need to know.
  • About us
    • Team pages >
      • Files, forms & all the boring stuff
      • Diary
Picture

Allen Jowitt
Parua Bay Pottery

Picture
Picture
My love of fire drew me to kilns and clay when I was a teenager back in 1969 at Maoribank near Upper Hutt. There were not many potters around but Bob and Jo Munro who were building their pottery at Akatarawa were wonderful enthusiastic mentors. I drifted north in my early twenties and discovered Great Barrier Island where I established Schooner Bay Pottery and potted full time for five years.
 We moved to the Tapu Valley on the Coromandel around 1980 as our family grew, and my intention to continue potting was put on hold while I built our house. Meanwhile cheap ceramic imports flooded into New Zealand and the game changed. A flood of a different type littered the river terraces of our land with headlogs left in the bush by early timber men and I entered a new phase working with figured kauri making furniture as Square Kauri Construction. And then in the early 2000s to Parua Bay where I purchased a gas kiln and re-awoke to the joy of clay and fire like some latter day Rip van Winkle. I’m back in the Leach tradition making high-fired domestic stoneware and porcelain with celadon, copper red and ash glazes – designed to be functional and enjoyed in daily use.​
Square Kauri lives on too - I'm still making wooden boards for bread or serving: from kauri, rimu, English oak and more. ​
Picture
I'm not exhibiting in the 2019 Arts Trail
Contact me
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.