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04 April 25
History & heritage
This year Griselda Hill Pottery is celebrating its 40th anniversary and to co-incide with Kirkcaldy Galleries’ 100th birthday, a joint celebration and exhibition is planned.
The Galleries are hosting a Wemyss Ware® Pottery weekend on 24th and 25th May, including a Pop-up Shop and painting and potting demonstrations. Several pieces especially designed for the Pottery’s fortieth (Ruby) anniversary will be for sale during the weekend, as well as the more regular pieces.
Griselda Hill Pottery is creating one hundred cat brooches to donate to the Galleries. These will be sold in the shop for fundraising purposes.
There will be a ‘Design-Your-Own Wemyss Ware® Cat competition for local primary schools. The winner will receive a large Wemyss Ware® cat painted with their own design.
Griselda is currently designing and painting a cat with decoration based on a lino pattern from a Nairn catalogue of the 1920’s for the Friends of Kirkcaldy Galleries to raffle for funds. The choice of this design is significant, since the Galleries were built in 1925 as the result of a bequest by lino manufacturer John Nairn in memory of his only son, who was killed in the First World War.
Find out more about the fascinating Wemyss Ware story.
“My interest in Wemyss Ware started as a child, when visiting my grandparents’ house in Devon. In the living room hearth sat a lugubrious black and white pig, which I thought was wonderful. When years later I moved to Fife, I realised it was Wemyss pig. I wanted to buy one, but even in the 1980’s original pieces were very expensive. I thought I would make one, and then the idea of producing pieces for other people occurred to me.” Griselda Hill
…and that’s how Griselda Hill started her pottery business in Ceres.
Wemyss Ware®
Wemyss Ware is probably the most highly collectable and sought-after pottery in Scotland, and the range includes beautifully hand painted pottery cats, pigs, other animals, giftware, decorative tableware, tiles as well as limited editions.
Since 1985 it has been produced by Griselda Hill at her Pottery in the delightful village of Ceres; a four-star visitor attraction with shop and visitor centre, where you can see first-hand her talented team at work. It’s fascinating to watch them at work and the end result is stunning.
Fascinating Facts
Royal Doulton bought the rights to the trademark when the Bovey Pottery shut in 1957, but because they hadn’t produced anything it had lapsed. Griselda was then able to start producing and acquired the Wemyss Ware trademark in 1985.
Since 1985 the Pottery has had many famous visitors, and has featured on the BBC Antiques Show with Tim Wonnacott, Flog It with Paul Martin and the Antiques Road Trip with David Barby.
Each piece is hand painted and unique. It takes around 2 hours to make and 1 day to paint one of the smaller pieces in the Wemyss Ware collection.
The painting technique is a secret, which has been passed down through generations from the original designer, Karel Nekola.
There are around 40 different pieces to choose from in the range and 40 different designs.
One of the most popular designs is the ‘Dragonfly’.
Best sellers are the cats, in particular the ‘Galley’ cat, followed by pigs.
Kirkcaldy Galleries logo is the Wemyss Ware Galley cat.
The late Queen commissioned two large Cabbage Rose vases for Balmoral Castle, to match an existing vase.
Griselda regularly commissions pieces for charity including Marie Curie and Coronary Care for the Young.
Famous owners of Wemyss Ware
Wemyss Ware has a long and distinguished history. Over the years it has been collected by many famous people, including Gore Vidal and Elton John. Queen Elizabeth the late Queen Mother was preeminent among its famous collectors, and King Charles continues to admire and collect the pottery.
There are 4 cabbage rose Wemyss Ware vases in Balmoral.
The Story
Wemyss (pronounced Weems) Ware was first produced in Kirkcaldy in 1882 by Fife Pottery. It was the brainchild of Robert Heron, the pottery owner, who brought a gifted decorator Karel Nekola, across from Bohemia to work with him.
The name Wemyss was in honour of the Wemyss family of the nearby Wemyss castle, who were early and enthusiastic patrons of the pottery. The most outstanding feature of the ware is the free-flowing and naturalistic hand painting. The pottery was an immediate success and found its way into such diverse places as local cottages and stately homes all over Scotland and beyond.
Following its popularity for four decades, Wemyss Ware became less fashionable in the 20th Century and in 1932 the Kirkcaldy Pottery closed. Joseph Nekola, Karel's son, moved down to the Bovey Pottery in Devon where he carried on producing Wemyss Ware on a small scale and passed on his secret painting techniques to apprentice Esther Weeks.
After his death in 1952 Esther became Head Decorator until the Bovey Pottery closed in 1957. No Wemyss Ware was produced throughout the 1970's or early 80's, until Griselda Hill started producing again in 1985.
Visiting Griselda Hill Pottery
The pottery is open Mon-Sat 2-4.30pm