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Jugtown Pottery was founded in 1921 [2] by Jacques and Juliana Busbee, artists from Raleigh, North Carolina, who in 1917 discovered an orange pie dish and traced it back to Moore County. There, they found a local tradition of utilitarian pottery in orange, earthenware , and salt glazes .
The North Carolina Pottery Center is a museum which highlights the Seagrove region's pottery traditions. Seagrove's pottery tradition dates back to the 18th century before the American Revolution. Many of the first Seagrove potters were Scots-Irish immigrants. They primarily produced functional, glazed earthenware. Due to the high quality of ...
Owens Pottery of North Carolina, also known as Original Owens Pottery is the oldest, continuously-operating pottery in North Carolina. [1] [2] It sells a variety of traditional, functional clay products and is best known for its difficult-to-produce fire red glazed pottery. Owens Pottery is currently owned and operated by Boyd Owens.
Owens Pottery was founded by J. B. Owens in Roseville, Ohio, in 1885. [1] In 1891 it moved to Zanesville , where Owens built a new factory on a site with its own rail spur. [ 2 ] It began producing art pottery in 1896, when it introduced the Utopian line with botanical decorations under a brown glaze. [ 3 ]
Ben Shearer (born 1941): artist who specialises in watercolour painting of the Outback Shen Jiawei (born 1948): Chinese Australian painter and winner of the 2006 Sir John Sulman Prize Kathleen Shillam AM (1916–2002): English-born sculptor
Owens Pottery may refer to: J. B. Owens Pottery Company - a defunct Ohio pottery that operated around the turn of the 20th century "Original" Owens Pottery - the ...
John Eyre (1847–1927) – English genre painter, illustrator, painted and designed pottery Ralph Hedley (1848–1913) – English realist painter, woodcarver and illustrator John William Waterhouse (1849–1917) – English Pre-Raphaelite painter especially of female characters from mythology and literature
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. [7] [8]