Arequipa Arequipa pottery was produced at a tuberculosis sanatorium in the San Francisco Bay Area from 1911 to 1918. For two years (1910-1912) master potter Frederick Rhead taught there; later the potter
Albert Solon taught there. Thrown and molded pots were produced, usually with a matte finish.
Cowan Pottery The
Cowan Pottery was founded in Lakewood, Ohio, in 1912 by
R. Guy Cowan. It later moved to Rocky River, where it remained until driven into bankruptcy by the Great Depression. Cowan Pottery produced work in a wide range of styles influenced by the Arts and Crafts and Art Deco movements as well as by Chinese ceramics. Many
Cleveland School artists worked there at one time or another, including
Arthur Eugene Baggs (founder of the Marblehead Pottery) and ceramics sculptor
Waylande Gregory.
Dedham Pottery The
Dedham Pottery, which operated in Dedham, Massachusetts, between 1896 and 1943, was founded by ceramicist
Hugh C. Robertson, who had previously worked with his father and brothers at another pottery. Robertson was deeply interested in glazes, and he developed both an
oxblood glaze (inspired by
the Chinese glaze) and a fine
crackle glaze, the latter of which became Dedham's signature, along with its frequent use of a crouching rabbit motif.
Dryden Pottery Dryden Pottery was founded in Ellsworth, Kansas in 1946 by Alan James Dryden Jr. There he developed a Volcanic Ash Glaze, he created a popular pottery business with the imaginative slogan, "A Melody in Glaze."Dryden made ceramics that were considered art pottery, but also advertising materials and tourist wares. Pieces imprinted with special logos and marks were commissioned by businesses and organizations around the country. The company's signature piece is a Grecian pitcher (still being produced today), the mold form was sold to Van Briggle along with a Black Volcanic Ash glaze he developed, to supplement the company's move to Hot Springs, Arkansas in 1956. The business grew and was successful in its new location. It grew into a large factory production and was sold all over the U.S. Sheer dedication has sustained the Dryden Pottery through the boom and bust cycles that affect any industry. Currently third generation original family operated. New pieces are still created daily and new glazes are still being developed. JKDryden and Zack Dryden are currently producing many experimental one-of-a-kind Art Pottery pieces, thrown and molded wares, and utilizing the signature developed glazes and application techniques.
Grueby Faience Company Founded in Revere, Massachusetts in 1894, the
Grueby Faience Company produced vases and glazed architectural
terra cotta and
faience tiles. Grueby vases were notable for their simple shapes and a hallmark matte cucumber-green glaze. New York City's
Astor Place subway stop is decorated with large Grueby tiles featuring a beaver, in honor of the fact that
John Jacob Astor's fortune derived from trade in beaver pelts. The company ran into financial difficulties in the early 1900s and went out of business in 1920.
Lonhuda Pottery Company The
Lonhuda Pottery Company was founded in Steubenville, Ohio, in 1892 by William Long and closed in 1896. It became known for brown
underglazes and
slip decoration. The ceramicist
Laura Anne Fry worked for Lonhuda in 1892–93.
Marblehead Pottery The Marblehead Pottery was founded in Marblehead, Massachusetts in 1904 as a therapeutic program by a doctor, Herbert Hall, and taken over the following year by
Arthur Eugene Baggs. The pottery's vessels are notable for simple forms and muted glazes in tones ranging from earth colors to yellow-greens and gray-blues. It closed in 1936.
Muncie Pottery Muncie Pottery was founded in Muncie, Indiana in 1918 by the Gill brothers. They began producing arts and crafts style art pottery in 1922. Reuben Haley designed three art deco lines for the company beginning in 1926. The Rombic line utilized cubist designs, the Figural line used low relief designs, and the Spanish line used flowing organic forms. Operations ended in 1939.
Newcomb Pottery The
Newcomb Pottery, also known as the Newcomb College Pottery, was located at
H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College in New Orleans, Louisiana, between 1895 and 1940. Vessels of various types were produced for the pottery by the college's students, who were all women. Typically these were vases with floral decorations in a strongly Art Nouveau style, often incised as well as painted and glazed.
Niloak Pottery The
Niloak Pottery was founded in Benton, Arkansas, in 1909 by master potters Charles Dean Hyten and Arthur Dovey. It was created to make art pottery It was manufactures first by the Eagle Pottery Company, a major producer of domestic ware or utilitarian wares. The name is the reverse spelling of the word
kaolin, an important component of the local clay. Niloak became known for its "Mission Swirl tor Swirled Middionware, a multicolored pattern resembling
marbled paper made by mixing colored clays together. Typically the Mission Swirl displays a mix of tan, red-brown, and blue-gray colors. Arthur Dovey, who previously worked for Rookwood Pottery, is credited with inventing the swirl concept. Swirled Missionware is an oddity within the American ceramic industry. Niloak was successful until the Great Depression put sales into a slump. As a result, Hywood changed manufacturing methods and introduced the Hywood Art Pottery. Financially challenged, it went out of business in 1947.
Owens Pottery The
J. B. Owens Pottery Company was founded in Roseville, Ohio, in 1885 by J. B. Owens. After moving to Zanesville, it produced art pottery from 1896 to around 1910, after which Owens concentrated on manufacturing tiles instead. Owens Pottery produced around four dozen different lines, mainly of vase, bowls, and pitchers. Distinctive lines include Utopian (brown glazed, often with botanical decoration), Matte Green (featuring stylized designs under a matte green glaze), and Mission (featuring
Spanish missions).
Paul Revere Pottery The Paul Revere Pottery was founded in Boston in 1908 by
Helen Storrow,
Edith Guerrier, and Edith Brown to provide employment and skills to young women. It grew in part out of a reading group formed by Guerrier, the
Saturday Evening Girls club, and it was managed entirely by the club members. For this reason the Paul Revere Pottery is sometimes referred to as the Saturday Girls. It lasted up to World War I. The pottery produced vessels with floral and animal motifs in a highly simplified graphic style, with matte or low-luster glazes predominantly in tones of green, blue, ochre, and brown.
Pewabic Pottery Pewabic Pottery was founded in Detroit in 1903 by
Mary Chase Perry Stratton and
Horace James Caulkins. The pair began the company by creating objects for everyday use that also utilized interesting glazes, which Perry Stratton developed. The company became well known for iridescent glazes, which were developed in 1906. Later, the pottery would go on to produce tile installations for notable buildings in Detroit such as the Guardian Building, The Detroit Institute of Arts, and the Detroit Public Library. The pottery has never ceased operations and is still a functioning studio and gallery.
Rookwood Pottery Company The
Rookwood Pottery Company was founded in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1880 by
Maria Longworth Nichols Storer, who was influenced by Japanese and French ceramics. Rookwood was known for experimenting with glazes and for the exceptionally high quality of the painted and incised work. Among the potters and ceramic painters who worked there were
Kitaro Shirayamadani,
Clara Chipman Newton,
Laura Anne Fry, and Arthur Dovey (who moved on to work at Niloak Pottery). The company was badly affected by the Great Depression and declared bankruptcy in 1941. It reopened in 1959 in Mississippi and struggled through various ownerships for several decades. In the early 2000s it moved back to Cincinnati, where it now operates.
Roseville Pottery The
Roseville Pottery was founded in Roseville, Ohio, in 1890 and moved to Zanesville eight years later. It began by making housewares and only began making art pottery around 1900. Frederick Rhead was Roseville's art director for five years (1904–09). Many Roseville pots carry floral decoration, frequently in low relief. Roseville ceased producing original art pottery in 1953.
Teco Pottery The
Teco Pottery was founded in Terra Cotta, Illinois, in 1899 by William Day Gates, as a specialty branch of his American Terra Cotta Tile and Ceramic Company, which made architectural
terra cotta items like drain tiles and chimney tops. Gates's experiments with glazes and forms led him to found Teco (an acronym for TErra COtta) to create art pottery, especially vases. Teco became known for its distinctive architecturally styled wares with little to no surface decoration and for a medium-green matte glaze. Most designs were the work of Gates himself, but a few Chicago-based
Prairie School architects also made works for Teco. Gates's ceramics business closed as a result of the stock market crash of 1929 and ensuing Great Depression, taking Teco Pottery down with it.
Van Briggle Pottery The
Van Briggle Pottery was founded in Colorado Springs, Colorado, in 1901 by Artus and Anne Van Briggle. The pottery favored the Art Nouveau style. It is still operating today, making it the oldest continuously operating art pottery in the United States.
Weller Pottery Potter
Samuel A. Weller founded the
Weller Pottery in Fultonham, Ohio, in 1872. The company turned out both art pottery and mass-produced work, becoming the largest pottery in the country by 1905. Many different potters worked at Weller over the years, including Frederick Rhead, who was there in 1903–04. For this reason, it has less of a signature style than some of the smaller art potteries. It closed in 1948. ==References==