When did you choose ceramics?
At 16, I started an evening class in pottery and took a GSCE Art along with re-take students, so it was a short six-month period of what would normally be a two-year course. Having created a small portfolio, I got offered a place to follow a ceramic degree. I have never looked back.
How did you start your career?
Straight after graduating from university, I started working in a ceramic model and mould making studio in an old schoolhouse studio just off Brick Lane, London. In 1995, lots of creative types were hidden around the area since it was cheap and not so fashionable at the time. I learned a lot about the ceramic industry there.
©Helen Johannessen
What is less known about porcelain?
It can be made to feel as light as a feather – this became important to me after I suffered with a back condition resulting in surgery. I am absolutely fine now but am always aware of creating heavy things, either actual or visual, it makes me feel weighed down. Porcelain can be thin, yet strong and voluminous without using very much material at all.
What is a memorable moment in your professional life?
I was awarded the inaugural 2020 President Award from HRH Prince Charles (now King Charles III) for my career in industrial ceramics, my discipline was added to The Endangered Crafts Red List in 2019. To be acknowledged for the decades of working in an essentially male dominated industry, as a self-taught female and Londoner, I felt very proud.