Remembering Jinny Whitehead

It was with great sadness that we learned of the passing of Jinny Whitehead on September 25, 2025. Jinny was a tremendous catalyst and friend of our community in Vancouver. From 2003 – 2004, she served as the vice president of the Potters Guild of BC, and, from 2005 – 2012, the president. She served on the Board of the North West Ceramics Foundation from 2004 to 2012. In 2021, The NWCF hosted an event, That Pottery Thing , with a room dedicated to Jinny in recognition of her many contributions and ceramic practice.

Jinny was born in Calcutta, India, to a family that had lived there for 3 generations. She was raised in the UK, immigrated in 1985 to Ontario, where she served as the Executive Assistant to the first head of Canada’s new security and intelligence agency (CSIS). She and her husband Gordon moved to Vancouver in 1995. She became involved with local potters, and, together with Pia Sillem and Joan Barnet, formed Studio 3, which worked out of the Mergatroid Building in Vancouver’s east side. A self-taught potter, she attended workshops and wood-fire conferences for many years, eventually building a wood-fire kiln with her friends in Lund, on the Sunshine Coast. Her handsome, hand-built vessels were created slowly and mindfully and often included found pieces of driftwood. Her work was exhibited in numerous exhibitions including In the Palm of the Hand, a BC/Japan exchange exhibition in Tajimi, Japan; Ashes to Art at Crane Arts, in Philadelphia and By Hand at the Museum of Vancouver in 2010. In 2018, The Guiding Hand, featuring her wood-fired vessels, was the final exhibition at the Gallery of BC Ceramics on Granville Island. Speaking about her work, the artist said:

Years of travelling and living in different countries have exposed me to an array of cultures. My creations fuse this awareness with a fascination for and love of natural forms–factors that inform the essential character of my work.

In 2005, she guided the PGBC through their 50th Anniversary, organizing celebrations, events, and exhibitions across the province. The year concluded with a catalogued exhibition, Transformations, at the Burnaby Art Gallery, curated by Dr. Carol E. Mayer, Darrin Martens, and Hiro Urakami.

In 2011, she worked with Linda Lewis and Debra Sloan to digitize and post the PGBC’s historical newsletters dating back to 1965. The newsletters are searchable and can be found on the UBC History Digital Program website here .

Sheila Morrissette worked closely with Jinny on the Guild’s Gallery Committee and on the Guild’s Board of Directors. She remembers Jinny as follows:

Jinny was an amazing president for the Guild. She led with thoughtfulness, sincerity, and transparency, always keeping the needs of the organization at the forefront and dedicating countless hours to the task, at the expense of time lost for work in her own studio. Hers were hard shoes to fill when she stepped down. I stayed on the Board for an additional year to help ease the transition but Jinny was always unfailingly available for help and advice.

Sadly, ill health took its toll, and Jinny was forced to retire from her studio in 2018. A much-loved and appreciated member of the ceramics community, she made a real difference to ceramics in our province. She will be long be remembered and greatly missed.