Mary Wondrausch

Mary Wondrausch OBE (17 December 1923 – 26 December 2016)[1] was an English artist, potter, historian and writer, born in Chelsea.[2] She trained as a potter at Farnham School of Art, latterly West Surrey College of Art and Design.

She was an honorary fellow of the Craft Potters Association and has work in the V&A Museum collection. She was awarded the OBE for services to the Arts in 2000.[3] Her primary interest is continental peasant art. Originally training as a watercolor artist, she later became interested in ceramics and opened her own pottery workshop in 1974. Inspired by 17th-century English slipware and Eastern European designs, such influences have informed her own work. She is known for lettering and exuberant use of colour. [citation needed]

Her Brickfields pottery is in Compton, near Guildford, Surrey,[4] where she moved in 1955 and subsequently raised three children.[5]

  1. ^ MARY WONDRAUSCH OBE
  2. ^ Brickfields : My Life at Brickfields As a Potter, Painter, Gardener, Writer and Cook (2004)ISBN 0-9548237-0-2
  3. ^ OBE award in The Independent
  4. ^ Mary Wondrausch pottery Archived 2012-09-18 at archive.today
  5. ^ Wondrausch, Mary (October 2018). "Country Folk". World of Interiors: 316–323.