When Kate Gordon was a kid, her parents would distract her by giving her clay to play with. Today, she’s creative director of Robert Gordon Australia, the country’s largest production pottery studio. The pottery business was originally established by her father Robert Gordon in 1979 from the tin shed at the back of their Gembrook family home, an hour east of Melbourne.
A life spent by the kiln
A life spent by the kiln or throwing pots, one of Kate’s earliest pottery memories is at age four, sitting on her father’s knee as he threw a vessel at the pottery wheel.
“He glazed it for me and wrote ‘Dad loves Kate’ on the bottom,” she says of the vessel she still owns 40 years later.
The family’s connection with pottery stretches back to Kate’s grandmother June Dyson.
“She’d studied ceramics in 1945 and left to start her own pottery in Black Rock with my grandpa,” says Kate.
June and husband Colin Gordon sold pieces to restaurants and stores. The next generation – Robert and Barbara Gordon, Kate’s parents – made spice jars and hand-thrown pieces, and were a regular presence at St Kilda markets in the 1980s.