A new start after 60: I had PTSD after surgery. Ceramics gave me the resilience to face the world again

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"Artist Linda Pitcher Overcomes PTSD and Cancer to Showcase Ceramics at Age 61"

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Linda Pitcher, a 61-year-old artist, has transformed her life after battling skin cancer and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) related to her surgery. Following the removal of a significant portion of her nose, Pitcher experienced severe anxiety and self-consciousness, leading her to avoid social interactions and public spaces. The turning point came when she engaged in cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), which encouraged her to confront her fears, including going to the supermarket and participating in conversations. Through this therapeutic journey, she rediscovered her passion for art, particularly sketching, which she had enjoyed since childhood but had set aside due to academic struggles and self-doubt stemming from a late dyslexia diagnosis. This rekindled interest in art led her to pursue a degree in contemporary design crafts at Hereford College of Arts, where she eventually found her true calling in ceramics, particularly appreciating the tactile and expressive nature of working with porcelain.

Pitcher’s artistic practice focuses on drawing on bisque-fired ceramic vessels, allowing her to blend her love for mark-making with the physicality of ceramic work. She describes her relationship with porcelain as one that reflects her own resilience; the medium reacts to her mood and requires persistence to create successful pieces. Her work not only serves as a creative outlet but also as a means of connection with others, as she engages with strangers while drawing in public spaces. This interaction helps her deflect attention away from her own insecurities and fosters a sense of community. Pitcher’s participation in the New Designers exhibition in London marks a significant milestone in her journey, showcasing her growth and newfound confidence. Despite still facing daily challenges, she has gained motivation and a sense of purpose, stating that her work in ceramics has given her life back and allowed her to reclaim her voice as an artist and individual.

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For many months after skin cancer surgery, Linda Pitcher couldn’t leave the house. She avoided answering the front door, and if she had to go into her local village, she wore a hat and pulled it low. Now, at 61, she is taking part in her first major ceramics exhibition, at London’sNew Designersnext month, where she will look visitors in the eye. “It’s nerve-racking. But I’m going,” she says.

Pitcher has not only had to overcome cancer, but also post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) triggered by the surgery, which entailed removing a large part of her nose. When the bandages were unwound after her first skin graft, the nurse held up a full-length mirror. “I fainted. I was sitting down, but I fell to the right. Half my nose had gone. Then you’ve got to walk out to your life and see people. No, no,” she says. “There was no support. I was so self-conscious.”

Desperate for a way out of depression, social anxiety and PTSD, Pitcher embarked on a course of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). With the therapist’s encouragement, she went to the supermarket in nearby Hereford. She managed a conversation at the counter. She made progress.

“What do you miss?” her therapist asked.

“Sketching on location,” Pitcher replied. She had struggled at school in Leicester,where she had taken A-levels in science. “I worked my back off and I still got bad grades, and I never forgave myself,” she says. In 2022, she was diagnosed with dyslexia, but as a child, “I just thought I was thick.”

Instead, she had always gravitated to mark-making. After saying goodnight to her parents, she’d sneak out of bed and “start working with pastels”. As she got older, she’d “go into the city and draw” – in Leicester, where she lived, or Birmingham – “and capture people’s expressions”. Now, she sees that sketching was “a way of talking”.

Pitcher had a succession of jobs – selling tickets in a bus station, graphic designer, print sales representative, administrator at a hospital. She married, had two children and, over the decades, she continued to sketch.

At 58, she embarked on a degree in contemporary design craftsat Hereford College of Arts. She had taken A-level art at night school in her 30s. (“I took a bottle of wine in, had a drink and just painted. Got an A grade for that,” she says.) She started her degree certain that she was going to become a printer. Instead, “I walked out going, ‘There’s something about ceramics, the feel, the process. The fight with that material.’

“I could see a path ahead which I never – never, never – thought I would attain. And I got a degree! This person who thought they were so thick.”

Her approach to ceramicsentails drawing on to bisque vessels– white, blank, after a first firing – on location.

She loves porcelain – “the hardest medium”. It’s “like throwing cream cheese. It knows your mood. You throw it on to the wheel and you can feel it as it’s centring, the trouble you’ve got. If you’re stressed, it will pick you up. It’s the chase I enjoy. Will it work, will it not work, will the sides collapse?”

She often knows how the porcelain feels. “It’s having the resilience – and I use that word – because when things go wrong when you’re throwing, you have to rethrow or the pots will stress-crack. It’s like me,” she says. “You keep going. Exactly the same every day. You lift your head up and go.”

Her focus is on drawing on to the ceramic in a way that “people can see the drawing, but the vessel can have colour too. You don’t want your voice as a mark-maker to be hidden by colour.”

These are the problems Pitcher works through, out on location, in Hereford, London or Bath, while strangers stop to chat.“People give their life stories. The attention deflects. You are no longer the focus. As you draw, you’re listening. You catch the speed of it,” she says. It all goes into or on to the pot. Each one contains so much.

Pitcher still finds “every day a struggle”. But some things have changed. “Now, when I talk, I look at people. And I forget I’m doing it.” Completing her degree, working with porcelain – she won thegreat northern contemporary crafter award– has “given me worth, drive, motivation and confidence. It’s given me my life back.”

New Designers is at the Business Design Centre inLondon, from 2to 12 July

Tell us: has your life taken a new direction after the age of 60?

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Source: The Guardian