Airey's friend Barry Brickell inspired her to begin working in clay, and she began to experiment with creating relief tiles from local Coromandel clay. The tiles were wood-fired at Driving Creek Pottery, producing interesting variations in colour and glaze, and depicted scriptural scenes from the gospels of the New Testament. Many of her scenes are set in the local landscape.[2]
Airey died on 16 August 2002, and she was buried at Buffalo Cemetery, Coromandel.[6]
In 2004, a group of Airey's friends mounted an exhibition of Airey's work at Hauraki House in Coromandel. In 2008, her work was exhibited at the Waikato Museum.[7]
References
^ ab"Deidre Airey". Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. Retrieved 13 June 2018.