Kevin Kilsby began his ceramic career with one-off art pieces, then became a prolific producer of garden pukeko birds, cartoon ware and Kiwiana. And now he's back to making one-off art pieces.
Kevin Kilsby is widely known as ‘the pukeko guy’ – in the last 30 years he has sold hundreds of thousands of these quirky garden sculptures, along with a prolific line in seagulls, pigeons, tui, kiwi, piwakawaka (fantail) and ruru (morepork). He also makes a range of colourful mugs, jugs, vases, teapots and tiles featuring kiwiana themes, cartoon characters, cats, and native plants and flowers.
These days the pukeko still sell, but he is making more
one-off art pieces. His delight in the
New Zealand forest has inspired him to create detailed composite wall sculptures
with ceramic leaves, twigs and even tiny bugs, all glued securely together into
a harmonious whole.
Like many of his peers, Kevin took up pottery as a hobby in the early 1980s. Still in his early 20s, he had gained a science degree and settled into full-time work. With time on his hands he sought an outlet for his artistic talent. Kevin started off as an art potter, making ceramic sculptures and learning from scratch about clay and glazes. Some of the first pieces were sold to a gallery shop in Lower Queen Street. He describes his first visit as “A timid young potter walking in there with a box of stuff…”
Kevin’s one-off pieces sold well and attracted critical interest, but they didn’t make a living. To speed up production he began slipcasting, decorating bowls and mugs and vases and plates in a distinctive colourful hand-brushed style.
By this time Kevin was lliving in Hamilton and working part time at the Western Potters Supplies shop in Te Rapa. He had ready access to materials and after work and during quiet periods he began slipcasting a few mugs, improvising a workbench out of piles of old pallets out the back. His moulds were made by Auckland-based Bruce Yallop. At that time Quentin Whitehouse owned Western Potters and on trips to Hamilton he was generous with advice and encouragement for the young novice.
By the early 1980s, Western Potters was selling new coloured stains and Kevin took to them with great joy, decorating his pieces with bright hand-brushed slips topped with durable clear glaze.
Production increased and two staff were recruited to keep up with demand. Right from the early days, Kevin made sure that his work was marked – see the catalogue at the end of this post.
Quite abruptly, Kevin found himself having to earn an income from pottery alone. In 1994 he and his partner Brent moved to Auckland. Kevin set up a workshop in a large bleak warehouse and they lived there for a few months before finding a permanent home.
The business ran smoothly apart from a couple of hiccups when other potteries started copying his designs, and Kevin was forced to take legal action.
Gradually, from those boom years the demand for Kilsby ware has declined. As demand decreased and his age increased, Kevin did not replace staff as they left. His longest serving staff member of around 27 years retired in 2020 just before the first Covid lockdown. Now he is down to one part-timer and another who comes in from time to time.
Over the years Kevin has experimented with other media besides clay. For about three years in the 1990s he worked in cast glass. The work sold well and he still feels pride in what he achieved, but glass can be difficult and unpredictable, and he needed expensive equipment to pursue the medium successfully. So he went back to clay which is more forgiving.
Alongside his clay work, Kevin tends a lush and beautiful subtropical garden, featuring pieces from his workshop and from other artists. The garden is open to visitors to the studio shop.
Timeline
1981 – Kevin Kilsby began making ceramic art pieces.
1988 – made intricate pressed ware with coloured porcelain
1992 QE2 grant enabled him to buy a kiln and other equipment and build a studio
1981 moved to Hamilton from Palmerston North
1986-1991 – worked at Western Potters Supplies Hamilton shop and
began slipcasting
1993/1994 moved back to Auckland. Set up workshop in his home in Mt Albert.
1996-2010. The peak years. Making kiwiana and quirky cartoon ware. Employed up to eight staff and sold throughout
New Zealand
1998-2010 – had a shop in Mt Albert
2019 – began moving away from slipcast ware. Made the first wall
sculptures
Identifying Kevin Kilsby’s work
Apart from the occasional salt and pepper shaker, it is very unlikely that you will come across an unmarked piece of Kevin Kilsby's work. Kevin never used a potter's mark stamp but almost without exception pieces that came from his workshop carry one of his signature marks.
Above: hand-scratched Kevin Kilsby in pressed porcelain. December 1988. This is typical of how Kevin marked his early works.
Above: signature included in Grapes and Oranges pattern. Circa 1990
Above: Kilsby '91 signature, again included as part of the pattern on a hand-decorated bowl
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Most of the information for this post came from Valerie Monk’s interview with Kevin Kilsby, at his home on 7 November 2019 and correspondence following that interview.
Further material is derived from the Kevin Kilsby Ceramics website.
There is more information on the New Zealand Pottery Forum website
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