Colleen Elizabeth Waata-Urlich (1939 â 10 September 2015) was a New Zealand ceramicist. Of MÃÂori descent, she belonged to Te Popoto o NgÃÂpuhi ki Kaipara and Te Rarawa. Through education, involvement in MÃÂori art collectives and production of exhibited work, Urlich was dedicated to the development of MÃÂori art.
Urlich worked as a trained teacher and later returned to study. She gained a Master of Fine Arts with honours from the University of AucklandâÂÂs Elam School of Fine Arts and a Bachelor of Applied Arts.
Urlich conducted research on the influence of Lapita pottery patterns within the Pacific. This research was the basis of her Master of Fine Arts with a subsequent paper published in Pacific Archaeology: Assessments and Prospects.
This research also influenced Urlich's clay work, which is based on customary knowledge and often acknowledges Pacific genealogy and female MÃÂori deities.
NgÃÂ Kaihanga Uku was founded in 1986 in order to support MÃÂori Clay workers. Urlich was a founding member of NgÃÂ Kaihanga Uku, alongside Paerau Corneal, Baye Riddell, Manos Nathan and Wi Taepa.
She was a committee member for Te Atinga, a platform that supports contemporary MÃÂori artists that operates under Toi MÃÂori. She was also a member of Kauwae, a group of MÃÂori women artists that formed in 1997.
Urlich was a member of NgÃÂ Puna Waihanga, a collective of New Zealand MÃÂori Artists and Writers that formed in 1973. For the exhibition Kohia Ko Taikaka Anake, which was developed in collaboration with NgÃÂ Puna Waihanga, The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and Te Waka Toi, Urlich was the regional organiser for Te Tai Tokerau.
In January 2015, Urlich, along with seven other artists with links to Te Tai Tokerau, travelled to Yeppoon, Queensland, to work for 12 days with a group of Aboriginal artists.
In the 2015 New Year Honours, Urlich was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to MÃÂori art. She was also a justice of the peace.
Urlich died in Dargaville on 10 September 2015, less than a week after fellow Northland MÃÂori potter Manos Nathan.