Ceramics
Ceramics at the festival was also dominated by the Maori
contingent. Workshops were held daily and a Maori style kiln was built
and fired. The master potters (nga kaihanga uku) were Manos Nathan, Colleen
Waata-Ulrich. "The Maori ceramic tradition is little known, however
it is said that is has ancestral connections to the Lapita pottery traditions
found in the western Pacific, particularly in New Caledonia."
'The building and firing of the Maori kiln was
a highlight of the Festival for me. Pots were stacked on the ground and
surrounded with kindling. A simple frame was made from branches in the shape
of a tipi (reminiscent of a termite mound to the Maori) around the stack
of pots. Then the structure was covered with slip soaked newspaper. An opening
was left on top, as was a small hole at the bottom to serve as the door
to the fire box. Then more thick slip was rubbed all of the sides. Upon
completely covering the kiln to about 1/2 inch thick with slip, kindling
was placed in the fire box and was lit. The kiln continued to be stoked
throughout the afternoon and evening.
The process of making the kiln took the better
part of a morning. It was lit in the early afternoon and allowed to fire
the rest of the day and throughout the night. Early the next morning it was to be broken open, its treasures revealed.
A late night of dancing and a cloudy, rainy
morning precluded my attendance at the kiln opening. When I arrived it had
been cracked opened and the pots had been given to those that had made them
and other special friends. Manos told me about his satisfaction with the
firing. All that was left were the remnants below and the dark scar on the
earth where the kiln had been.
A third Maori potter that I did not have the opportunity to meet was Kelly King. Her works, seen below, were displayed at one of the venues called the SPC. Ms. King is a recent graduate of the Waiariki Institute of Technology. She incorporates several media in her work.
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