Title: Sedna on a Pedestal II
Size: 26cm x 9cm x 9cm
Medium: High fired black stoneware clay with beeswax.

Additional Information
Sedna is the Inuit Goddess of the Sea. She changed from a human into a goddess by gaining a whale tail. She protects the world’s oceans, especially its sea mammals.
These sculptures are an exploration of what Sedna looks like, as she transforms from a human into a goddess. Sedna on a Pedestal is how I imagine her in her final, divine form. The forms were inspired by Barbara Hepworth’s “Figure” from 1933, as I wanted to celebrate Hepwoth’s sculpture and found it perfect for the sea goddess. I have added a fin on her back and have made variations in colour and hair shapes to represent her moods.


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About the Artist


Leonie Siri MacMillan Biography

Leonie Siri MacMillan is an interdisciplinary artist working across sculpture, drawing and film. She is a nomad at heart, drawn to the ocean and bodies of water.  Her practice investigates mythology as a way of understanding complex emotional and environmental experiences.

Presently she is developing a technique of drawing with seawater and ink, that allows the pigments to move freely until the seawater evaporates.  The drawings help her to discover shapes for ceramic sculptures that form the basis of an imaginary world inspired by Orcadian legends.  She is in the process of inventing a new mythology, led by the sea goddess Mitherspher.  It's a world that involves fin maidens that live under the magical island of Eynhallow, while subterranean creatures lurk in the shadows.  The goddesss mission is to heal failing ocean currents and sea mammals.  Within this new work, she hopes to demonstrate the inherent strength of Women combining with the preservation and restoration of ocean ecologies, in response to climate change.

He ceramic sculpture is made with various stoneware clays, high-fired and decorated with coloured slips, melted glass, circular markings and sometimes photographic images.  Her glazes and shapes are informed by the abstract interpretation of her invented mythology, drawn with seawater ink on Fabriano paper.

Key achievements include:

 Mitherspher, a short film selected for the Society of Scottish Artists 127th Annual exhibition at the Royal Scottish Academy, Upper Galleries, Edinburgh. January to February 2026.

MFA Fine Art with distinction from Duncan of Jordanstone College of art and design. Dundee, 2025.

Cailleach, a ceramic sculpture selected for the Scottish Landscape Awards Exhibition, from The Scottish Art Trust, City Arts Centre, Edinburgh, 2023/4.

Echo Chamber, a video performance with clay, shown as part of A Brief Conversation by Duncan of Jordanstones Student Curatorial Team, at the V&A Dundee, 2024.

Broken Torso, a ceramic sculpture that won the Booker Prize competition, in response to Hisham Matars novel In the Country of Men, 2017.

Commissioned to make two ceramic Baptism Fonts by St Andrews University Chaplaincy, for St Salvators Chapel and St Leonards Chapel, St Andrews, 2016.

She has work in the University of Dundee Museum Collections, and is represented by Sproson Gallery, St Andrews, The Weem Gallery, Pittenweem, and Fidra Fine Art, Gullane.