Ceramics in America 2003

Ceramics in America 2003

Ceramics in America 2003

Ceramics in America 2003

Paperback(2003 ed.)

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Overview

The third issue of the now-celebrated interdisciplinary annual journal from the Chipstone Foundation http://www.chipstone.org/ that examines the role of historical ceramics in the American context, intended for collectors, historical archaeologists, curators, decorative arts students, social historians and contemporary potters.

This volume features articles on chamber pots, the Talbot Hotel Pit group, terracotta gravemarkers from New Jersey and New York, Staffordshire potters and their emigration to America in the 1840s, the pottery of Henry Piercy, the potters and pottery of Morgan's Town, Virginia, ceramic and porcelain representations of Uncle Tom's Cabin, Long Island Redware, and the ceramics of Lucio Fontana.

In addition to heavily-illustrated articles by noted American and British ceramic scholars and a private American collector profile, this issue contains New Discoveries edited by Merry A. Outlaw, Book Reviews and a Checklist of Articles and Books edited by Amy C. Earls, and an Index.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780972435314
Publisher: Chipstone Foundation
Publication date: 08/01/2003
Series: Ceramics in America Annual
Edition description: 2003 ed.
Pages: 344
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.00(h) x 1.03(d)

About the Author

Robert Hunter is an archaeologist and ceramics historian ­living in Williamsburg, Virginia. He is an elected Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London.

Table of Contents

Our Home in the West: Staffordshire Potters and Their Emigration to America in the 1840s - Miranda Goodby
Highlights in the Development of the Rockingham and Yellow Ware Industry in the United States—A Brief Review with Representative Examples - Arthur F. Goldberg
In the Philadelphia Style: The Pottery of Henry Piercy - Barbara H. Magid and Bernard K. Means
Swirls and Whirls: English Agateware Technology - Michelle Erickson and Robert Hunter
The Talbot Hotel Pit Group - Peter Williams
Through the Lookinge Glasse: or, the Chamber Pot as a Mirror of Its Time - Ivor Nol Hume
Taken for Granite: Terracotta Gravemarkers from New Jersey and New York - Richard Veit and Mark Nonestied
Meditations on a Chinese Musician - Graham Hood
Informed Conjecture: Collecting Long Island Redware - Anthony W. Butera, Jr.

NEW DISCOVERIESA Coxon Waster Deposit of the Mid-1860s, Sampled in Trenton, New Jersey - William B. Liebeknecht, Rebecca White, and Richard W. Hunter
Excavations on the Site of the Lewis Pottery Complex, Buckley, North Wales, United Kingdom - Leigh J. Dodd
A Maryland Grouping of Bow and Derby Figures of the 1760s - Stephen E. Patrick
Samuel Malkin in Philadelphia: A Remarkable Slipware Assemblage - David G. Orr
The Two Faces of Anthony Baecher - Christopher T. Espenshade
The Richards Face - Shades of An Eighteenth-Century American Bellarmine - William B. Liebeknecht and Richard W. Hunter
The Prodigal Son Returns to Jamestown - Beverly A. Straube
Backcountry Sophistication: Anthropomorphic Elements from a Piedmont North Carolina Kiln - Alain C. Outlaw
Toy Story - L. Madison Washburn
Molded Malevolence: Instrumental Symbolism Rendered in Clay
Christopher C. Fennell
Making His MARK - Mark M. Newell

BOOK REVIEWSAn Illustrated Guide to Minton Printed Pottery, 1796-1836, Geoffrey H. Priestman - Robert Copeland
The Potter's Art, Henry Glassie - Ellen Denker
China and Glass in America, 1880-1980: From Tabletop to TV Tray, Charles L. Venable, Ellen P. Denker, Katherine C. Grier, and Stephen G. Harrison - Amy C. Earls
Delftware at Historic Deerfield, 1600-1800, Amanda E. Lange - Louise P. Richardson
Rookwood and the Industry of Art: Women, Culture, and Commerce, 1880-1913, Nancy E. Owen - Cynthia Brandimarte
Porcelain from the Vung Tau&#8221Wreck: The Hallstrom Excavation, Christiaan J. A. Jörg and Michael Flecker - Linda R. Shulsky
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