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Home >> Pottery - Porcelain >> By Type >> Other Pottery

Great & Noble Jar (South Carolina Stoneware) by: Baldwin


 Price: $34.99

ISBN:  0820313718
Complete Book Title:Great and Noble Jar: Traditional Stoneware of South Carolina
Author:Cinda K Baldwin
Binding Type:Hard Cover with dust jacket
Copyright Date:1993
Number of Pages:234
Size:8.25 X 10.25 in.
Book Subject:Stoneware
International Customers:This item WILL fit in a Global Priority unpadded flat envelope.
Domestic Customers:This item ships BOXED.
Great & Noble Jar (South Carolina Stoneware) by: Baldwin - UG-1993-0820313718-WH3 - 1

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Table of Contents

In Great and Noble Jar, Cinda K. Baldwin offers the first authoritative study of South Carolina stoneware and traces the ways in which a rich regional tradition emerged from a unique cultural source.

As Baldwin notes, South Carolina's old legislative district of Edgefield (an area now comprising Edgefield, Aiken, and Greenwood counties) has long been recognized as the place of origin for an alkaline-glazing process that came to characterize pottery produced throughout the lower South. The process developed during the early nineteenth century after the poisonous properties of leadglazed stoneware became known. Abner Landrum, a newspaper editor and scientific farmer, was probably the first to combine locally available materials with Chinese glaze formulas to produce this new and safer alkaline-glazed stoneware.

The plantation operations of the Edgefield District, Baldwin shows, created a demand for large-scale food storage and preservation, often in containers of huge capacity. In response to this need, an extensive system of family-owned stoneware factories emerged. Reflecting the contributions of the many slaves and freed blacks who worked in the industry, the objects produced in these factories often incorporated African designs and techniques. Particularly notable were the "grotesques," or "voodoo jugs" wheelthrown vessels onto which the slave potters applied facial features in molded clay. Baldwin pays special attention to the remarkable work of a slave potter named Dave, who marked his wares with brief verse inscriptions, including this one found on a large food-storage container: "Great & Noble Jar, / hold sheep, goat, and bear."

Tracing the tradition's history through the postCivil War period and the first half of the twentieth century, Baldwin also examines South Carolina pottery outside the Edgefield District and analyzes a variety of decorative treatments and forms. She concludes with a consideration of the decline and renewal of the southern folk pottery tradition. The book is illustrated with nearly two hundred photographs (including fifteen color plates), maps, and drawings. Complementing earlier studies that focused on Georgia and North Carolina pottery, Great and Noble Jar is a significant contribution to the understanding of this heritage.


 

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