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Hilda Katherine Ross (1902 - ?) was a Canadian potter, painter, and educator working primarily in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Life and career
Hilda Ross was born in Ottawa, Ontario to William Lebreton Ross and Caroline Stewart Lapman.

She studied art at the Winnipeg School of Art under the tutelage of Group of Seven Artist Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald. She later studied under the direction of another Group of Seven artist, Frederick Horsman Varley, at  the short-lived British Columbia College of Art, the forerunner of the Vancouver School of Art which later became the Emily Carr University of Art and Design. She studied ceramics under Rex Mason, Carleton Ball, Konrad Sadawski, and Kyllikki Salamenhakra at the University of British Columbia.

She was the recipient of several awards in ceramics including the Canadian Handicrafts Guild, 2nd best group of entries in 1953; the UBC Art Gallery Purchase Award in 1954; Prize for bowl from the Canadian Handicrafts Guild in 1955; the Independent Order of the Daughters of the Empire [I.O.D.E.] at the British Columbia Potters 8th Annual Exhibition of 1956;and Gold at the Prague International Exhibition in 1962.

During her career she also exhibited widely both in Canada and abroad. Major exhibitions include the Canadian Pavilion at Expo 67, the Universal and International Exhibition in Brussels in 1958, the 3rd International Exhibition of Ceramic Art in Prague 1962, and the Department of Trade & Commerce Exhibitions in Berlin and Florence 1964.

Ross and B.C. pottery
Ross was instrumental in the growth of pottery as an artistic practice in B.C. With Molly Carter, she taught pottery at Gordon House at the West End in the late 1940s--some of the first independent pottery classes taught in the city. In 1948 she, Carter, and Zoltan Kiss took over teaching ceramics classes at UBC's Extension Department in what was the Fine Arts Gallery in the library basement. At the time, the ceramics program was funded by the University Branch of the I.O.D.E. In 1952, the classes were re-located to a more permanent home, retrofitting a former army barrack that they nicknamed the Pottery Hut. Ross continued to teach part-time at the new facilities along with her former teacher, Rex Mason, Kiss, Sasha Makovkin, Reginald Dixon, and Alice Bradbury.

Ross also helped studio potters find viable sources of clay: in 1958 she, Olea Davis, Reg Dixon, and Stan Clarke used a grant from the Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation to prepare a report on clays at B.C. for the UBC extension Department.

In 1949, after a visit to the Canadian Guild of Potters in Ontario, Ross, Davis, Avery Huyghe, and Stan Clarke decided to found the Potters Guild of British Columbia. This was accomplished in 1955 with Davis as the first president.