This is a collectable little lustre lidded pot or bowl made by Margery Clinton at her Templelands Studio in Dunbar.
It is a fine piece of Scottish pottery and so beautifully made.
The little pot - consists of a base and a domed lid.
It features on the lid a simple hand-painted blue flower head - which is surrounded with Clinton's special gold lustre glazes.
The base is white towards the bottom with a bright shiny gold lustre band on the rim. The interior is all shiny with ochre yellow and very bright gold lustres.
This fine sculptural pot is a little more unusual and this is reflected in the asking price.
Dimensions: diameter is 3 1/2 inches. The height is 2 1/4 inches.
It has her hand-signed and customary initialled signature on the base, as photographed.
HISTORY: Margery Clinton (1931–2005) was a specialist in reduction lustre glazes. She studied painting at the Glasgow School of Art between 1949 and 1953 and was part of the Young Glasgow group, whose inaugural exhibition was held at the McLellan Galleries in 1958.
She undertook her postgraduate study at the Royal College of Art, London, researching reduction lustre glazes, an interest she later developed with great success.
She also undertook a number of notable architectural commissions later in her life, and her work with tiles was regarded as spectacular. She has been exhibited at the Tate, the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Glasgow Art Gallery and the Royal Museum of Scotland.
An outstanding ceramic mural, The Physic Garden, commissioned for the tercentenary of Mary Erskine School, in Edinburgh, typifies her imaginative portrayal of medicinal herbal plants in six panels, in memory of the founder's husband, James Hair, an Edinburgh druggist. Appropriately, she chose Jonah and the Whale as the subject for a large decorative panel in the new Musselburgh Baths.
She was particularly interested in lustre glazing in Islamic art, and she travelled widely, attracting the attention of the Sultan of Oman and the King of Jordan. She executed commissions for both, and for the Duke of Edinburgh.
Currently, examples of her work are currently on display in the Scottish Design Galleries at the V&A Museum in Dundee, and the Museum of Edinburgh on the Royal Mile.