thisNZlife

CAREER PATH

Artist Clare Riley and a life worth living

WORDS K ATE COUGHLAN

1960 to 1975

Clare Reilly grew up in Pāremata overlooking Pāuatahanui Inlet, north of Wellington, and went to Queen Margaret College. A week after her 15th birthday, she quickly became very ill and learned she had a congenital disability in one kidney. Surgery to save the kidney was unsuccessful, and she had it removed. However, her lung was damaged in the surgery, and she spent six months of her School Certificate year in hospital. “I have been well ever since and treasure the awareness that life is sacred,” she says.

1975

“My father, something of a feminist, forbade me to learn to type and wanted me to aim high in the career world rather than accept traditional job roles for young women. He was a geophysicist, fluent in many languages and interested in art, music and history. My mother had two careers: nursing and teaching. Even though I was drawn to painting, I studied law and arts at Victoria University thinking I’d become an environmental lawyer or a town planner. Art, drawing and painting was my passion alongside ballet and modern dance, and I spent most of my spare cash on beautiful art books.”

1976 to 1987

Then along came young artist Max Podstolski, who swept her off her feet. “It changed the course of my life. We developed an immediate and strong bond, eloped and married in Christchurch, and I started my painting life. It was a huge shock to my parents initially, although they later became supportive of my decisions. My bond with Max was to last 41 years.”

Initially, Clare painted and exhibited full time before needing to find part-time work. Her administration role with a family- owned

retailer morphed into a corporate role as an assistant manager — the first woman on the management team. She enrolled at the University of Canterbury business school and at the New Zealand Institute of Management. Once again, she was the only woman, this time in a group of 19 men. She was up for promotion to an even bigger job but, realizing the business world was not feeding her soul, returned to painting, and planning a family. “We had been married for 11 years by then.”

1988 to 2008

While raising their two sons, painting and exhibiting, Clare trained as a Montessori preschool teacher. “I worked part-time for 16 years, loving the interaction with children, seeing their creative spark ignite.”

It was a juggle, raising her family, painting and exhibiting and supporting elderly parents. For a decade, she cared for her mother, who had developed dementia. “It is a cruel disease on many levels, a very long goodbye. I grew much closer to her as I became her mother in her mind, and she was a child again. I try to look for positives in adversity, and it taught me infinite patience and to see the world from her point of view. The journey towards death with a loved one is a privileged time. It also prepared me well to handle what was to come. My mother died in October 2015, and in September 2016, Max was diagnosed with a brain tumour. They can cause cognitive impairment, so I knew I could handle whatever cropped up with him.”

2008 to 2016

“I began full-time painting again in 2008 despite the Global Financial Crisis causing galleries to close, but I was well supported by my audience. The pace of my work expanded, and so did the demand for it.” In the aftermath of the Christchurch earthquakes (2010), the city lost its appeal, especially when close friends moved away. Looking for a recreation and retirement spot with a rural feel, they discovered Doctors Point Beach (on the coast just north of Dunedin). The couple fell in love with the small community just a 12-minute commute from the city. “The climate, bush, bay, the wild ocean beaches, the peace and tranquillity, all close to the medical and academic and cultural facilities of a city.” By this time, Max (then 57), had had a heart attack (10 days after the first Christchurch quake). Accessible medical facilities were essential.

2017 to 2021

In 2013, they found a house in the bush overlooking Blueskin Bay and were waiting for renovations to be complete before their planned move in 2017. “Unfortunately, before we could live our dream, Max was diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumour and died within months. I moved to Blueskin Bay three days after his funeral.

“The following year, I went on a Camino walk in Spain as a fundraiser for Leukaemia & Blood Cancer New Zealand. Max was a great walker and had planned for us to do the Camino, and he loved Spain and had learned the language. I’m not a great walker, so it was a challenge for me — I had to dig deep, and I suffered. But it brought me the spiritual healing I needed. Afterwards, I treated myself to a wine and food tour of Portugal, a trip to Paris and two weeks on the Côte d’Azur.”

In her local community, Clare happily settled back into painting and teaching the dance form nia (the name originally stood for non-impact aerobics). Recently, she was asked to produce a book about her life and work.

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2021-11-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-11-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://thisnzlife.pressreader.com/article/282561611356648

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