Untitled (A Large Vase) encapsulates all that Dame Magdalene Odundo instils and invests in her pottery. Beautifully modelled by hand, balanced, poised and universal, it displays why Odundo is one of the most eminent ceramicists, indeed artists, to live and work in the UK today. Her work transcends t.mes and place, inspired by a litany of diverse influences that are test.mes nt to her extraordinary intellect, breadth of knowledge and references, and her absolute dedication to clay. The exhibition, The Journey of Things, at the Hepworth Wakefield and Sainsbury Centre in 2019 was a powerful demonstration of the many and varied objects that Odundo studied and selected that together formed the body of precedents from which her innovative and deeply personal craft emerges.

The potency of a clay pot or any pot is just amazing. That notion of emptiness is just that, a notion. Because they are not empty. They contain so much. The healing power of pots is so important. You only have to look at some of the pottery you find in Nigeria for instance, and across Africa. Those pots now in museums and viewed as sculptural pots were made as remembrance pieces, perhaps to embody someone who had died. They are very sculptural and they are very figurative...What is so beautiful about the pot is that it conveys a universal language, that of spiritual utility and aesthetic. It is revered and understood by all and therefore important to all...What else can tell you about human life more than a pot does?
DAME MAGDALENE ODUNDO IN CONVERSATION WITH BEN OKRI, 15 FEBRUARY 2019, QUOTED IN THE JOURNEY OF THINGS, EXH. CAT., INOTHERWORDS, LONDON, 2019, N.P.

Born in Kenya in 1950 to a journalist father and a mother who had studied economics, the family spent t.mes in Delhi but most of Odundo’s upbringing was in Nairobi and Mombasa on the coast. She moved to the UK in 1971 to study graphic and commercial arts at Cambridge College of Art but the Zimbabwean-born potter Zoe Ellison encouraged her to pursue making. The Modernist treasures of Kettle’s Yard, including works by Hepworth, Moore, Brancusi, Miro and Gaudier-Brzeska were formative encounters. Odundo continued her studies at the West Surrey College of Art and Design in Farnham in 1973 where she learnt to throw on a wheel but it was studio visits to Bernard Leach in 1974 and, most importantly, Michael Cardew in Cornwall that facilitated Odundo’s consideration of her position as maker crossing between cultures and traditions. Odundo had a two-month residency at the Pottery Training Centre in Abuja, Nigeria, established by Cardew in 1951, where she learnt to hand-build in the Gbari method, a technique traditionally employed by female potters and taught by the famed Nigerian maker Ladi Kwali.

The method of hand-building is at the heart of Odundo’s work, the process itself, like with Moore and Hepworth’s direct carving, dictating the final form.

I have been asked why I hand-build, and the answer is that hand-building is a slower process than throwing on the wheel and I need to work slowly in order to think; and I need the t.mes to find the form I am looking for at the t.mes of making.
DAME MAGDALENE ODUNDO, QUOTED IN THE JOURNEY OF THINGS, EXH. CAT., INOTHERWORDS, LONDON, 2019, N.P.

Taking a ball of clay, Odundo hollows this and pulls the inner clay upwards, building up the walls and adding flattened strips of clay to add height. Through the slow and physical process of manipulating the clay, Odundo finds, or reveals, the innate character of that particular piece. The act of making is in the round, the maker herself circles around the piece, encountering the clay from all angles and she pays particular attention to the inside, smoothing the inner surface with gourd scrapers. Rather than using a glaze, Odundo employs a slip from the same clay as the vessel itself, a terra sigillata. Coated in this slip, Odundo burnishes the surface using stones and polishing tools. The extraordinary colours are achieved in the firing process in a gas kiln where Odundo controls the amount of oxygen to make bright orange or iridescent black.

The reliance on the fire to give the work that last movement in its dance, to give it that last touch of spirit, to transform it into something completely new is a process that all ceramicists get excited about. When the firing works, it can be magical. All of a sudden, each vessel, bowl or urn defines itself with its own identity. It is here that they establish their own lives. It is astonishing that this final cycle in the making has that power to amaze even the maker...me! Making in clay is just so magical!
DAME MAGDALENE ODUNDO, QUOTED IN THE JOURNEY OF THINGS, EXH. CAT., INOTHERWORDS, LONDON, 2019, N.P.

Following on from the world-record sale of Odundo’s Untitled in our recent summer sale, Untitled (A Large Vase) is another superlative example to appear on the market. It highlights the significant tradition of pottery-making which has flourished in Britain over the course of the century, from Bernard Leach to Lucie Rie and Odundo today – an art form that is increasingly recognised and revered among collects ors worldwide.

Odundo’s work is held in public institutions around the globe, from the Americas to Europe, Africa to Asia, including the British Museum, London; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC; and the National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya.