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Mary White

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Mary White née Rollinson (1926–2013) was a ceramic artist and calligrapher .

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14-962: Mary White may refer to: People [ edit ] Mary White (ceramicist and calligrapher) (1926–2013), UK and Germany Mary White (classicist) (1908–1977), Canadian classicist and university professor Mary White (designer) (1912–1981), Australian designer and crafts adviser Mary White (Fianna Fáil politician) (born 1944), Irish Fianna Fáil party politician Mary White (Green Party politician) (born 1948), Irish Green Party politician Mary White (physician) (1925–2017), English physician Mary White (textile designer) (1930–2020), English textile designer Mary Anne White (born 1953), Canadian materials scientist Mary Daisy White (1873-1958), American politician and business owner Mary deLuce White ( c.  1876–1960 ), American stage actress better known as Mary Hall Mary E. White (1926–2018), Australian paleobotanist Mary Jarrett White ,

28-512: Is a suburb of Cwmbran , Wales. Croesyceiliog is primarily a residential district and contains a wide variety of housing from Victorian terraces and even older Welsh cottages to property built between 1930 and 1970 and newer developments within the area. Most of the housing was built in the 1950s and 1960s as part of the development of Cwmbran New Town. The former Gwent County Hall was located in Croesyceiliog. Until 2012 it provided

42-598: The 1977 film Mary White, former Australian national netball captain Ships [ edit ] Mary White , a lifeboat based in Broadstairs, Kent, England Mary White , a steam trawler built in Aberdeen, Scotland. Others [ edit ] Mary White (film) , a 1977 TV movie See also [ edit ] Mary Whyte (born 1953), American watercolor artist [REDACTED] Topics referred to by

56-569: The Glamorgan and Monmouthshire League, while Croesyceiliog Rugby Club play in the Welsh Division Three East League. Croesyceiliog also has a lawn bowls team which play at Woodland Road Sports Grounds. Woodland Road Park is a recreation area which contains a bowling green, rugby pitch, tennis courts, outdoor paddling pool and adventure playground. The Croesyceiliog bypass was built in the 1960s and forms part of

70-475: The Highway and North Road. There are two schools, Croesyceiliog Comprehensive School , and a primary school on North Road (Croesyceiliog Primary School). There is a Baptist chapel on Chapel Lane, Pontrhydyrun Baptist Church and an Anglican church named St Mary's Church on Bryn Eglwys (literally 'Church Hill'). Croesyceiliog Cricket and Rugby Club is on the Highway. Croesyceiliog Cricket Club currently play in

84-529: The early 1980s White began to make organic forms in porcelain, partly hand built. She used the clay as thin as possible, almost like torn paper and assembled it in layers. Ideas come from the layers of rock on the seashore, shells and waves rippling over the sand and colours in the sea and sky. She preferred to make shapes that were more oval rather than round. In 1990 she became involved with calligraphy again and attended an International symposium in Belgium. Under

98-736: The first woman to vote in the state of Georgia Mary Jo White (born 1947), attorney for the Southern District of New York Mary Jo White (Pennsylvania politician) (born 1941), member of the Pennsylvania State Senate Mary Louisa White (1866–1935), British composer, pianist, and educator Mary White Rowlandson (c. 1637–1711), colonial American woman writer of a captivity narrative G.C. Mary White (died 1944), Canadian journalist known as Bride Broder Mary White (1905–1921), daughter of newspaper editor William Allen White , subject of

112-784: The influence of a master calligrapher, Villu Toots from Estonia , she regained her enthusiasm for calligraphy and experimented with combining the two artforms. Her work is collected internationally and appears in museum collections, including the Victoria and Albert Museum , London and the Musée des Arts Décoratifs , Paris. She died in Germany in 2013. Lettering on Ceramics , 2003, reviewed in Croesyceiliog Croesyceiliog ( Welsh pronunciation: [ˌkrɔɨs ə ˈkɛiljɔɡ] ; ' Cockerel's cross ' )

126-528: The link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mary_White&oldid=1259574187 " Categories : Human name disambiguation pages Set index articles on ships Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Articles with short description All set index articles Mary White (ceramicist and calligrapher) White

140-414: The main administrative base for Monmouthshire County Council (even though it was outside that administrative area) and Gwent Police , and some offices for Torfaen County Borough Council . The demolition of the premises was required as a result of concrete cancer , and took place in 2013. There are shops, takeaways, pubs, hairdressers and a doctors' surgery in the main shopping areas of Edlogan Square,

154-441: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. [REDACTED] [REDACTED] List of ships with the same or similar names This article includes a list of ships with the same or similar names. If an internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change

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168-602: The time she and her husband moved to Germany in 1980 she rarely made tableware. In 1982 she was awarded the Staatspreis Rheinland-Pfalz for outstanding craftwork. Before the move to Germany, White had occasionally exhibited calligraphy with the SSI and had used letters on bowls, mainly painted in lustres. In Germany she could not find a market for these and at that time had no contact with German calligraphers, so for many years she concentrated on ceramics. In

182-684: Was born in 1926 in Croesyceiliog , Wales . From 1949 to 1950 she studied at Goldsmiths' College and in 1951 she married the painter Charles White (d.1997). She was made a fellow of the Society of Scribes & Illuminators (SSI) in 1962 and later the Letter Exchange . During the early 1970s White taught at Atlantic College , Glamorgan. After teaching for twenty years in grammar schools, art colleges and Atlantic College, White gave up teaching in 1973 to work freelance. In 1975 White

196-564: Was invited to take part in an international symposium in Cardiff and had the opportunity to experiment with porcelain. She developed wide-flanged bowls, extending the thin rims to breaking point. She also found the possibilities of using colours in glazes instead of the more usual warm browns that she had been using for tableware. This marked a great change in her work. Turquoise became her favourite colour, at first pure, and then with subtle variations. She began to make more individual pieces and by

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