During her career she travelled across Europe and the United States, demonstrating her skills and versatility, all without speaking English. She took a historic art form out of the context where it existed, and now it has global influence. Her hybrid pots and water jars can now be seen as radical objects – dense, heavy, decorative objects that traverse time periods, techniques, cultures and worlds. And they have now entered museums – highlighting the importance of Black women in the history of non-Western pottery making.
The central aim of my show Body Vessel Clay: Black Women, Ceramics & Contemporary Art (which showed in April 2022 at London’s Two Temple Place and York Art Gallery in June 2022) was to demystify Kwali for those who know her, introduce her to a new audience, and explore Gwari making traditions – while placing her in the context of three generations of Black women working with clay.
Her tableware and vessels sat beside pieces by Magdalene Odundo, who she taught in the 1970s, and work by a new generation of artists. I want to highlight the importance of Black women to the history of pottery.
This is an extended version of an article that first appeared in the March/April 2022 issue of Crafts magazine (#293). You can explore our entire archive by becoming a Crafts member