The 2021 volume of Ceramics in America features wide ranging essays and new discoveries on ceramics used and collected in the American context. Of special note is the reporting of seventeenth-century Chinese porcelain discovered in the ca. 1607 contest of Jamestown, Virginia. Another essay documents the archaeologically-recovered Chinese export porcelain of James and Dolley Madison from their home Montpelier in Virginia. Other articles explore ceramics made to commemorate historical and political events both in America and Great Britain. The subject of nineteenth-century American stonewares made in Massachusetts, New York, Connecticut, and Virginia is covered in four important articles. A special collector’s biopic surveys a highly important American collection of eighteenth-century armorial Chinese porcelain. Other articles will include a profile of North Carolina potter David Stuempfle who continues the old-age tradition of producing wood fired stoneware and a summary of an archaeologically recovered assemblage of early nineteenth-century slip decorated earthenwares attributed to Enoch Wood and James Caldwell of Burslem, Staffordshire.
Table of Contents
The Thames Tunnel Inkwell
John Ault
The 18th-Century Stoneware of Ashbel Wells, Jr. of Hartford, Connecticut Revealed
Robert Hunter
Art and Ancestry: Collecting Chinese Armorial Porcelain
Bruce Coleman Perkins
The Invisible American Potter: Justus Morton of Brantford, Ontario
Sylvia Lovegren-Petras
Jingdezhen, China . . . Bantam, Java . . . Jamestown, Virginia: Degrees of Separation for a Porcelain Bowl
Bly Straube
The Little Brothers Pottery of Charlestown, Massachusetts
Lorraine German
A Newly Discovered Design Source for a Washington Memorial Jug
Adam Erby
Tribute To An Unsung Hero
Sam Margolin
Coincidental Attribution
Jonathan Rickard and Donald Carpentier
New Discovered Examples from DuVal’s Richmond Stoneware Manufactory
Robert Hunter
From China to Virginia: A Dish with View of the Dutch Folly Fort in Guangzhou
Matthew Reeves and Ronald W. Fuchs II
A Study in Austerity: The Stoneware of David Stuempfle
Robert Hunter with David Stuempfle
Fit for a Queen: A Chinese Porcelain Bottle Found at Jamestown, Virginia
Merry Outlaw
Eighteenth Century Revolutionary Creamware at Rocketts Landing, Richmond, Virginia
Dan Mouer
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Robert Hunter is an archaeologist and ceramics historian living in Williamsburg, Virginia. He is an elected Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London.
Editor Ronald W. Fuchs II is a ceramics curator and historian. He lives in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. The 2021 volume of Ceramics in America features wide ranging essays and new discoveries on ceramics used and collected in the American context. Of special note is the reporting of seventeenth-century Chinese porcelain discovered in the ca. 1607 contest of Jamestown, Virginia. Another essay documents the archaeologically-recovered Chinese export porcelain of James and Dolley Madison from their home Montpelier in Virginia. Other articles explore ceramics made to commemorate historical and political events both in America and Great Britain. The subject of nineteenth-century American stonewares made in Massachusetts, New York, Connecticut, and Virginia is covered in four important articles. A special collectors biopic surveys a highly important American collection of eighteenth-century armorial Chinese porcelain. Other articles will include a profile of North Carolina potter David Stuempfle who continues the old-age tradition of producing wood fired stoneware and a summary of an archaeologically recovered assemblage of early nineteenth-century slip decorated earthenwares attributed to Enoch Wood and James Caldwell of Burslem, Staffordshire. The 2021 volume of Ceramics in America features new discoveries about ceramics used in the American context. Topics include American stoneware, Chinese export porcelain, and commemorative historical and political wares. Of special interest are ca. 1790-1810 slip-decorated earthenwares from the manufactory of Enoch Wood and James Caldwell. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780986385797
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