Archive for December, 2009

New Photos from the NC Pottery Center of Catawba Valley Pottery

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

We have received some photos of some of the older pots on view in the exhibit, Fire in the Valley: Catawba Valley Pottery Then and Now, which is on view at the NC Pottery Center in Seagrove, NC, through Jan. 30, 2010. I originally made the entry on Dec. 2, 2009, you can go back by scrolling down the page, but you can also get there by clicking this link. These images will give readers a better picture of the entire exhibit, but it’s still better if you go see it yourself.

Thanks to the NC Pottery Center for sending us these images.

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Pickens County Museum of Art & History in Pickens, SC, Features Works by Ceramic Artists of the Upstate

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

This press release came after the Dec. 09 deadline for Carolina Art and our website, Carolina Arts Online, but I wanted folks to know who might be traveling or visiting the Upstate area of SC or in parts of Western North Carolina that this exhibition is taking place – starting Dec. 12, 2009.

The Pickens County Museum of Art & History in Pickens, SC, is presenting the exhibit, The Up’State of Clay, featuring a collection of works by ceramic artists of the Upstate, on view through Feb. 11, 2010.

This collection of works from some of the Upstate’s most influential ceramic artists includes work by Alice Ballard, Sharon Campbell, Bob Chance, Gary Clontz, Jim Connell, Nathan Cox, Kyleigh Daigle, Roger Dalrymple, Rob Gentry, Diane Gilbert, Sue Grier, Amy Goldstein-Rice, Lynn Jenkins, Peter Lenzo, Cynthia Link, Jennifer Mecca, Johnny Nutt, Jay Owens, Renee Rouillier, Virginia Scotchie, Paula Smith, Chris Troy, Mike Vatalaro, Ashley Womack, Denise Woodward Detrich and David Zacharias.


Virginia Scotchie

The exhibition is guest curated by the Johnny Nutt who says about the show, “South Carolina has a long, rich tradition of ceramic production. Edgefield, South Carolina is recognized widely as the birthplace and earliest center of the alkaline-glazed stoneware tradition in the southern United States, and from there spread as far west as Texas and on up into the northeast. By the middle of the 20th century, however, there were virtually no traditional potters working anymore in South Carolina. Today however, a combination of thriving university-based ceramics programs, such as those at Clemson, the University of South Carolina, Winthrop, and Furman, along with the Professional Clay Program offered by Piedmont Tech in Edgefield, have revitalized ceramic production in South Carolina.


Nathan Cox

Graduates of these programs, along with newly-immigrated South Carolinians and self-taught outsider-artists have brought an incredible diversity of ceramic production to the Upstate area of South Carolina. It is the hope of the Pickens County Museum, through this exhibition, to highlight not just the work of the twenty-six participating artists but to provide a unique opportunity for folks to see, in a single stop, the wide array of ceramic art being produced in the Upstate of South Carolina in these early days of the 21st century.”

This exhibition is part of the museum’s 2009 – 2010 exhibition season sponsored by Pickens Savings & Loan and Upstate Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery & Dental Implant Center.

The Pickens County Museum of Art & History is funded in part by Pickens County, members and friends of the museum and a grant from the South Carolina Arts Commission, which receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Also on view at the Museum through Feb. 11, 2010, are the exhibits, Story, Song, and Image: A Merging of Musical Heritage and Narrative Painting, features works by Glen Miller and John Fowler. Both artists have a passionate interest in the traditional music of South Carolina, and how it intertwines with its’ people and their lives. Also, the exhibit, April Harrison: Grateful. A native of Greenville, SC, Harrison paints images primarily in acrylic, powder, watercolor, pencil and collage.


April Harrison

For more information please contact the museum at 864/898-5963.

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Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston, SC, Offers Free Community Day – Dec. 12, 2009

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

The Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston, SC, is pleased to announce a holiday-themed Community Day on Saturday, Dec. 12, 2009, with complimentary admission and family activities from 10am – 1pm, sponsored by the Junior League of Charleston. The Junior League of Charleston Community Days are held quarterly to offer visitors the opportunity to experience the Gibbes’ dynamic programming free of charge.

Thank you Junior League of Charleston!

The Celebrations Community Day will include holiday art-making activities for children as well as holiday performances by Mt. Pleasant Presbyterian Church Children’s Choir, Ashley Hall Caroline’s Carolers and Ashley Hall Lower School Strings. Beverages will be provided by Rising High Café.

Visitors to the Gibbes will be able to enjoy the exhibit, Brian Rutenberg: Tidesong, organized by the Jerald Melberg Gallery in Charlotte, NC, which features abstract landscape paintings – two of which are thirteen feet wide – by South Carolina native Brian Rutenberg. Inspired by the landscape and waterways of his home state, Rutenberg’s work combines brilliant color with expressive brushwork to create visually stunning abstract paintings. The exhibit will be on view in the Museum’s Main Gallery, through Jan. 10, 2010. This exhibition accompanies the release of Brian Rutenberg: The Sensation of Place, the first ever major monograph on the artist’s paintings and drawings. (An excellent holiday gift for any art lover or yourself.) The exhibition includes recent paintings on canvas and works on paper that explore the artist’s fascination with the landscape and quality of light along the South Carolina coast. The book will be available in the Gibbes Museum Shop. You can read an article about this exhibit at Carolina Arts at this link. Also see our Oct. 09 cover featuring a work by Rutenberg at this link.


Brian Rutenberg

This exhibit falls into the “Do Not Miss” category. You can read a previous blog entry by me at this link.

On view in the Museum’s Rotunda Galleries, through Jan. 10, 2010, is the exhibit, Daufuskie Island: Photographs by Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe. The artist’s fascination with Daufuskie Island began during visits to the neighboring resort island Hilton Head, SC, with her husband, Arthur Ashe, in the 1970s. Her interest resulted in a compelling group of photographs that document life on Daufuskie through sensitive, intimate portraits of island residents.

Also on view in the Gibbes’ First, Second and Third Floor Galleries, is the ongoing exhibit, The Charleston Story. Drawn from the museum’s permanent collection, this exhibition highlights significant people, places, and periods from Charleston’s beginning as a British colony, through the American Revolution, the later ravages of the Civil War, and culminating today as a culturally diverse and dynamic community.

Established as the Carolina Art Association in 1858, the Gibbes Museum of Art opened its doors to the public in 1905. Located in Charleston’s historic district, the Gibbes houses a premier collection of over 10,000 works, principally American with a Charleston or Southern connection and presents special exhibitions throughout the year. In addition, the museum offers an extensive complement of public programming and educational outreach initiatives that serve the community by stimulating creative expression and improving the region’s superb quality of life.

For further information contact the Gibbes by calling 843/722-2706 or visit (www.gibbesmuseum.org).

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13th annual Catawba Valley Pottery and Antiques Festival Takes Place Mar. 27, 2010 in Hickory, NC

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Well, as I mentioned in an earlier blog entry I picked up a flyer about this pottery festival at the Whynot Pottery booth at the 2009 Celebration of Seagrove Potters in Seagrove, NC. It was just another example of how these potters network. Promoting one festival at another and besides it will also benefit the NC Pottery Center – something of interest to all Carolina potters and me. And once again it shows how far reaching the Pottery Center is – here they are involved in an event all the way up in Hickory.

NC Legislators – don’t pay attention to anything the Bobbsey Twins of the pottery world tell you – check out the facts on the NC Pottery Center. You’ll be surprised at what’s the truth.

So, after I got home from Seagrove I checked out the website for the 13th annual Catawba Valley Pottery and Antiques Festival, which was actually the website for the Catawba County Historical Association, where I found this press release.

The 13th annual Catawba Valley Pottery and Antiques Festival will be held on Saturday, March 27, 2010, at the Hickory Metro Convention Center, I-40, Exit 125 in Hickory, NC, from 9am until 5pm.

The Festival is a fundraising event for two non-profit institutions, the Catawba County Historical Association and the North Carolina Pottery Center. Tickets are $6 for adults and $2 for children 12 and under and are available at the door. Ticket holders will be entered into a drawing for door prizes.

Friday night, March 26, 2010 is the Preview Party from 7-10pm. A southern-style supper, live entertainment, and the early buying opportunity make this a popular event. Advance tickets are required and must be purchased by March 19, 2010. Tickets are $40. No Preview Party tickets will be sold at the door. Please call 828/324-7294 for purchase information.

Do you have a piece of pottery of unknown background? Representatives from the North Carolina Pottery Collectors’ Guild will be available to offer expert opinions on the possible background and history of individual collectors’ pieces.

In addition to the 110 pottery and antique vendors from all over the Southeast, this year’s festival will feature a pottery exhibit prepared by Dr. Terry Zug, retired University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill professor and author of Turners and Burners: The Folk Potters of North Carolina.

The speaker this year is Stephen C. Compton, a native of Alamance County, NC. Compton holds an A.B. in anthropology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, M.Div. from Duke University, and D. Min. from Emory University and currently is the district superintendent for the Sanford District of The United Methodist Church. He formerly served as president of the board of directors for the North Carolina Pottery Center and was a founding member and first president of the North Carolina Pottery Collectors’ Guild.

An avid collector of North Carolina pottery for nearly twenty years, Compton has assembled a group of about 1,000 pieces of pottery dating from the 18th century to the present, including utilitarian earthenware, stoneware, and art pottery. Objects from his collection have been displayed in numerous exhibits and publications. Publication of a book edited by him, North Carolina Earthenware: Origin of a Ceramic Tradition, is pending.

For further information on the Catawba Valley Pottery and Antiques Festival (http://www.catawbahistory.org/catawba_valley_pottery_and_antiques_festival.php), please contact 828/322-3943 or 828/324-7294.

For advance tickets to the Friday Night Preview Party ($40 per – required by Mar. 19, 2010) send check or money order to: CVPAF, PO Box 2583, Hickory, NC 28603

This announcement might seem a little ahead of time, but it never hurts to plan ahead and many Yankees (I’m originally from Michigan) who read this will be looking for any excuse to head south after a couple of months of winter weather. And, I’m sure we’ll have more details to offer about this festival as we get closer to the date of its happening.

Plus, I’m always looking for ways to show that Carolina Arts has an expanded vision of the overall pottery community in the Carolinas. Get the hint you other potters and pottery areas? You feed us the info – we spread it around.

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NC Pottery Center in Seagrove, NC, Offers Exhibit on Catawba Valley Pottery

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Bloggers Note: We have received some images of the older pots in this exhibit, sent to us by the NC Pottery Center (Thanks!). We hope you enjoy them – they make this entry a whole lot better.

On my way to the Celebration of Seagrove Potters Gale Preview in Seagrove, NC, which was held on Nov. 20, 2009, I stopped in at the NC Pottery Center to see the exhibition, Fire in the Valley: Catawba Valley Pottery Then and Now, which will be on view through Jan. 30, 2010.

I can’t imagine a trip to Seagrove or even a trip near Seagrove without a stop at the NC Pottery Center – unless I have already seen the exhibit they are presenting and even then, I can still think of a reason to stop by – just to make sure it is still there.

In 2008, many people came together to help keep the doors of the NC Pottery Center open in the face of financial doom, and fundraisers have keep the doors open during 2009. It will take continual efforts by supporters to keep those doors open into the future. You can make donations on the Center’s website, take out a membership there, and even order one of the many fine books about NC pottery from their Museum Shop. The battle to save the NC Pottery Center is not over – keep the money coming.

But above all – go there and see what a wonderful resource center it is in presenting the story of North Carolina’s pottery heritage – which continues today.

This is not an exhibit review. I’m a long way from being able to review any pottery exhibitions. I’m not sure I’ll ever get there, but I’m learning more and more about pottery all the time. This entry is meant to get you to go see this exhibit and for many of you – to go visit the NC Pottery Center.

I’ll start with an excerpt from an article presented in Carolina Arts in our Dec. 09 issue about this exhibit: For most North Carolinians, the Seagrove, NC, area is the Mecca of pottery production, the place that most embodies historical continuity and native artistry. But just 100 miles due west of Seagrove is the Catawba Valley, the site of North Carolina’s other great pottery tradition. During the 18th century, numerous families, most of German origin, settled what are now Lincoln and Catawba Counties in the western Piedmont. The Catawba River encircles this region, and its South Fork, which meanders through the heart of both counties, has provided superb clays for the potters’ wheels. (See a complete article about this exhibit at Carolina Arts.)


Daniel Seagle c. 1830


Works by Michael Ball

What we have here is an exhibition of the old – some pieces dating back to the 1830′s and the new – works being made by contemporary potters in the Catawba Valley today. In an informal setting, you might not be able to identify the old from the new – except for subtle hints – the traditions of this area are strong even in today’s potters. You could probably place pots made in three different centuries next to each other and the average viewer couldn’t tell the difference – not to say that each individual potter didn’t have their own style. And, there are examples which show that these potters could step away from tradition at times – to express themselves in different ways. (The older pots were under plexiglass, making it hard to photograph.)


Isaac Lefevers c 1850


David Hartzog c 1850

Many might think viewing parts of this exhibit that these are just a bunch of – plain old pots – like the kind I was used to seeing on my grandparents farm back in Michigan – some collecting rain water for watering plants or filled with umbrellas or walking canes near a door. Pots that are no longer used for their original functions, but nonetheless have lasted longer than modern containers. These pots were mostly made for function too.


Works by Kim Ellington

The central figure in making this exhibit possible in showing the Then and Now of Catawba Valley pottery is Burlon Craig, who was born in 1914 and lived to the age of 88, before he died in 2002.

In the 1980′s, Burlong Craig was almost the last of the Catawba Valley potters, but he taught or more exact – let others observe him and the techniques involved in producing the areas style of pottery – leading to a whole new generation of Catawba Valley potters including: Michael Ball, Kim Ellington, Walter Fleming, Luke Heafner, Jeff Young, and Bob Hilton. All have works in this exhibit.


“Clown Face” by Jeff Young

The contemporary works presented in this exhibit by this next generation of potters might not seem so contemporary compared to pottery made today – especially seen by me that evening at the Celebration of Seagrove Potters Gala Preview. But in comparison to the works shown in the historical part of this exhibit – there are many signs of how these potters have expressed themselves differently, yet some pieces are the same shapes, but with a little fancier pattern of glazes. The Catawba Valley traditions are still held strong. There are even a few examples where Burlong Craig worked outside the box of tradition.

Although my tastes in pottery lean toward color and texture – I could see the merits to having some simpler – more traditional pieces. The more you looked at some of these works the more elegant they looked.


“Handled Rundlet” by Michael Ball

Of course like any exhibition on any subject – the limitations of space and the public’s attention span limits telling the whole story. Getting a fuller, richer, picture of the Catawba Valley pottery of North Carolina is up to you. You need to visit the potteries operating there, attend a local festival, read books that have been written about the area and its potters, and visit websites offering other information.


John Goodman c. mid 19th century

One such website is Catawba Valley Pottery of North Carolina. This website was created to serve as an informational and educational tool concerning Catawba Valley Folk-Art Potters and their wares. You can read a history of Catawba Valley Pottery at this link.

The 13th annual Catawba Valley Pottery and Antiques Festival will be held on Saturday, March 27, 2010, at the Hickory Metro Convention Center, I-40, Exit 125 in Hickory, NC, from 9am until 5pm. The Festival is a fundraising event for two non-profit institutions, the Catawba County Historical Association and the North Carolina Pottery Center.

And, info about the Burlon Craig Pottery Festival can be found at this link.

If any of this interest you I hope you’ll make the effort to go see this exhibit and check out the NC Pottery Center as well as potteries in Seagrove. But, I hope you’ll also think about making a trip to the Catawba Valley too. We want you to enjoy the pottery of both Carolinas – all of it.

In closing, I’d like to voice my opinion, once more, that we in South Carolina would be so lucky to have such a facility as the NC Pottery Center in SC – not just to show off our state’s pottery heritage, but to show off any areas of the visual arts. I hope that one day soon the citizens of NC and its leaders in the NC Legislature realize what they have and take measures to preserve it well into the future. The story of NC’s pottery legacy is still in the growing process – there will be a lot more to tell in the future.

And, there are a lot of people all over the world who are interested in that story. I know by the amount of folks who have been following my blog entries about Seagrove, NC pottery and its potters.

Fire in the Valley: Catawba Valley Pottery Then and Now will be on view through Jan. 30, 2010.

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