Northland’s renowned Māori stained glass artist Kathy
Shaw-Urlich has died peacefully after a long battle with cancer.
Kathy preparing panels for the wharekai at Whakapara marae in March 2013 |
Kathy was born in England, but as the daughter of Ron Shaw an English aircraft engineer and Desiree Joan Browne, a former Miss Northland, she affiliated to Ngāti Hau and Te Uri o Te
Aho o Ngāpuhi. She made her first visit to New Zealand at the age of 26 to
visit her Māori grandmother, and as a proud descendant of Patuone she eagerly
explored her Māori heritage and especially her connection to her grandmother’s whānau
of Ngāti Hau and Whakapara marae.
Although never one to promote herself, Kathy in fact achieved
considerable success. She topped her class and won a national competition as
well as a scholarship while studying at the Swansea Institute, in Wales, before
completing a Masters in Fine Art at Central St Martins in London. In 1990 she exhibited glass panels at New
Zealand House for the 150th anniversary of the Treaty of Waitangi and held
another solo exhibition, Te Po me Te Ao (The Dark and the Light) at the
Commonwealth Institute in London.
She was commissioned to design the inaugural window for the
prestigious Human Genome Project campus near Cambridge. Her tribute panel to
Rahera Heta Windsor, kuia of Ngāti Ranana in London, was one of 100 pieces selected
by the Corning Glass Museum in New York, from 2,500 international entries, to
feature in New Glass Review, the world’s leading journal of innovation in glass
art.
Wharenui window, Whakapara marae, March 2013 |
In 2007 Kathy married Rev. Rapata Urlich and moved to New
Zealand, where she and Robert established a home and a studio for making stained glass artwork
at Whatuwhiwhi. Kathy connected with the glass community in New Zealand, and
made many friends, personal and professional, both locally in Northland and
nationwide.
She exhibited her work in solo exhibitions and in group shows. Most of her public commissions are in
England, but she made a wonderful suite of work for St Isaac’s church, the
wharenui and the wharekai at Whakapara, the latter made with the support of a
Creative NZ Te Waka Toi grant. She designed a wonderful Passchendaele memorial
window for All Saints Church in Kaeo, though sadly she did not live long enough
to complete the commission.
Altar window, St Isaac's church, Whakapara, 1999 |
Her works
are held in many private collections in New Zealand, as well as England, Wales,
France and Iceland. News of her death has been greeted with a great sense of
loss by those who are proud to own her work and by all those who loved and
admired a warm and wonderful woman who bore her increasing illness with
strength, faith and courage.
Moe mai rā, e hine, te tohunga karaehe.
Pouakai Pareora, 2016 |
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