Life behind the wheel

There are very few forms of art where the notion of “success” can be measured. Pottery is one of them — and it’s exactly why Renae Pennicuik loves it. The part-time potter talks to Teagan Bell about the compelling nature of her stoneware creations. Picture: Louise Barker.

Sitting at a makeshift bench in Renae Pennicuik’s backyard studio, it’s not hard to see where she draws her inspiration.
A table is littered with mugs, jugs and bowls, glazed in the green-grey hue of saltbush, and to my right are various platters, chalky and red like the earth beneath us, drying on the window sill before they hit the kiln.

A pale pink vase sits rejected on a shelf; “I wasn’t a fan of the pink salt colour,” Renae tells me.

In the corner of the room on a desk, a sculpture of a backpacker carrying a basket of oranges waits patiently for a coat of paint in preparation for Renae’s next exhibition.

“I think I might put a little road sign on her shoulder with ‘Sydney; 1088 kilometres’. I might even call her 88 days,” she tells me, over the whirr of the pottery wheel.

As she slaps down a fresh mound of clay and fashions a cup before my eyes, we chat about her upcoming April exhibition, to be centred around the production and consumption of food in the region.

“It’s a joint exhibition with a friend of mine. She does quite different work to me – she works on a small scale and does painted tiles that depict scenes of restaurants and things like that,” she says.

“I might be doing some large platters that depict the scenery with the Murray and the red layout with our farms and everything. I’ve got some aerial shots I’m working from.

“I think we’re going to call it ‘Nourish’.

“The whole thing, the whole creative process, even this pottery, is nourishing me.”

Shaping Success

Studying a Diploma of Visual Arts in Cairns, Renae took to the wheel immediately, transfixed by both the practicality and the challenges of the medium.

“I just wanted to make stuff, and I really liked the logical, structural aspect of making pots on a wheel – I really wanted to conquer it,” she recalls.

“To control this as a medium is super challenging, so when you have the success, when all the different things along the way could’ve gone wrong didn’t and you actually have a success – chasing that is addictive because it’s almost like it’s out of your hands.”

A shelf full of seconds and ‘failed’ pieces by the studio door echoes this sentiment, and though it might be enough to discourage the average Joe, the uncertainty around the success of her pieces until they are literally set in stone is what’s kept Renae an inspired potter for nearly two decades.

She now spends her time mastering various techniques through a meticulous method of trial and error, with her current focus on glazing techniques and attempting more complex shapes.

“I made citrus juicers the other day, just because I can,” she says.

“They’re quite complicated to make because they have that pocket inside, but pushing myself on the wheel and making complicated shapes is just a good challenge and real fun.”

Creative license

As we sift through the pieces she’s been “squirrelling” away for future market stalls, Renae explains the importance of staying true to your inner artist and listening to your intuition.

“I do get a little bit torn between what’s ‘in’ and what people like and then what I like to make and what I like,” she says.

“But pottery has never really been something I’ve relied on for income, so I do feel I have a bit more of a creative license.

“As much fun as it would be to just be a potter, I don’t want to lose my passion for it, I don’t want it to become a chore.

“To be a production potter – it’s not really in me.

“Maybe one day when I retire I’ll make the leap.”

But Renae says she does have “definite plans” for the future, including teaching workshops at her Red Cliffs property, and launching a website for selling small batches of her work every month or two.

“I’ve still got work to do on my property with the car park- there’s lots of landscaping to be done before people can come here on a weekly basis,” she says.

“But yeah, workshops and a website are probably my next two things.”

Find Renae on Instagram @penni.q.pottery and her stall at the Sunraysed Twilight Market on November 23.

READ THIS WEEK’S FULL ISSUE OF SUNRAYSIA LIFE

Digital Editions


  • House prices still on the rise

    House prices still on the rise

    HOUSE prices in north west Victoria are continuing to outstrip other regional centres in annual growth. According to the latest PropTrack home price index data,…

More News

  • Mobile outage planned for Red Cliffs

    Mobile outage planned for Red Cliffs

    MOBILE services in Red Cliffs will be temporarily affected from Monday 9 March to Thursday 12 March while Telstra upgrades its mobile base station. Upgrades are being made to improve…

  • Grapes wither on the vine as record rain risks harvest

    Grapes wither on the vine as record rain risks harvest

    HARVESTING of Australia’s billion-dollar table grape crop has ground to a halt as fruit growers hit by record rainfall brace for heavy losses. Flash flooding struck the country’s table grape…

  • Sexual touching was a ‘mistake’

    Sexual touching was a ‘mistake’

    A VANUATU national said he made a “mistake” when he touched a female stranger on the thigh in a “very unsettling and disturbing experience”. The Mildura Magistrates’ Court heard father…

  • MFC permit ruled OK

    MFC permit ruled OK

    VICTORIA’S planning umpire has found development of Mallee Family Care’s new $28 million headquarters in Mildura is lawful. The Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal was asked to review a Mildura…

  • Accused stalker refused bail

    Accused stalker refused bail

    A ROBINVALE man alleged to have bombarded a woman with hundreds of unwanted messages that included “disgusting” and “disturbing” images and professing his love for her has been refused bail.…

  • Plan launched to prevent violence

    Plan launched to prevent violence

    The Mallee Family Violence Executive, or MFVE, has released its 2026-2-29 Strategic Plan, giving directions for responding and preventing family violence in the Mallee. Family violence remains a big issue…

  • Wet and wild weekend weather

    Wet and wild weekend weather

    A COUPLE of rainy days have seen the region impacted by flash flooding and locally intense rainfall. Bureau of Meteorology senior meteorologist Dean Narramore said Mildura had recorded 83mm of…

  • Tour for a cancer cure

    Tour for a cancer cure

    A MILDURA man will join more than 200 cyclists on a nine-day ride from Canberra to Hobart to raise money for cancer research, support, and prevention programs across the country.…

  • Private hospital’s big birthday

    Private hospital’s big birthday

    IN honour of 40 years passing since Mildura Health Private Hospital first opened its doors, members of the community were invited to tour the Thirteenth Street facility on the weekend,…

  • Sunny vibes at Cullulleraine

    Sunny vibes at Cullulleraine

    WHO needs Aretha Franklin, Etta James, or Linda Perry when you have Aussie songstress Sunny Luwe, who has been influenced by all those amazing female artists, performing at the Cullulleraine…