10 Reasons I Collect Antique Pottery

Posted: Mar 01, 2011 |Comments: 0 |
  • Beauty -  Pottery is an art.  Creating a pottery piece is labor intensive, dangerous and fairly unpredictable.  (especially in the old days)  A number of steps and devotion goes into its creation.  In some sense I believe the potters energy is transferred to the clay he or she works.  I appreciate the skill and artist vision required to produce these aesthetically pleasing pieces of art.
  • Yesteryear -  As a kid I would often accompany my parents to antique stores, flea markets and garage sales.  I had a happy childhood.  Perhaps picking through layers of dust latent items in stale smelling air takes me back to that time?
  • Utility -  Pottery items have purpose, even if it is only to look pretty.  The majority of pottery items hold or support something else.  Food is served, flowers displayed, books supported, liquid mobilized and plants grown with ceramic assistance.  They are essential tools that have enabled our modern lives to become more civilized and beautiful.
  • Important History -  Pottery has been produced for 10′s of thousands of years.  It was probably discovered by our ancestors building a fire on ground rich with clay.  After discovering the rock like result in the fire pit, someone came up with a life altering idea.  I believe that it is in my innate  makeup to appreciate the stuff and it forms.  When I buy and clean an under appreciated garage sale find, I am in essence reintroducing it into the world by assigning it its rightful importance.  I become the pottery's temporary caretaker for future enthusiasts.
  • Imagination -  Along with the ancient history goes the more recent history of antique pottery.  When I find and buy a piece, of let's say Rookwood, my imagination begins to travel back and through time.  I dream of the time period in which it was created.  What was America like then?  Where was this made?  Who specifically had there hands in its birth?  Where may this piece have traveled in its eighty plus years of existence?  Who and how many may have owned it.  What items may have been in it or used with it?  How long will this pottery item remain on earth in its current form?  Etc. Etc.  I've found that posing and focusing my attention on these imaginative questions is almost meditative.
  • Mystery -  Discovering an antique pottery piece that is pleasing to my eye is just the beginning.  After getting the item home, a rewarding bit of sleuthing commences.  The process of investigating marks and initials, studying forms, glazes and  techniques can be not only interesting but, lends itself to enrich the other bullets on this list.  For example, if I'm able to nail down that a piece of pottery was created by Niloak around 1915, I can more easily imagine prewar WWI Arkansas and the hands that may have taken part in its development.  (Such as Charles Dean "Bullet" Hyten or a potter named Arthur Dovey)  The more specific the details concerning the ware, the more interesting and valuable it becomes.
  • Discovery -  There is a certain rush of adrenaline associated with spotting a valuable piece of antique pottery on a thrift store shelf.  The excitement of picking it up and hastily checking for chips while glancing over the ridiculously low price is oh so much fun.  A sense of personal satisfaction comes with purchasing a two dollar piece of pottery while knowing that the item is coveted and valuable to collectors.
  • Hunting – Looking for places to uncover cool pieces of antique pottery is fun.  It takes me to different towns, cities and out of the norm places.  While in the hunt there are many different things to see, new locations to experience and unique (sometimes weird!) people to meet.  It's nice to stop and smell the flowers along the journey.  There is always something new in the pursuit of the old.
  • Value -  Antique pottery can be quite valuable.  Hoarding a collection of worthy pieces is as good as having money in the bank.  It's also pretty nice to get a hundred dollars on Ebay for something I bought for three bucks!

Well, there you have them.  If these reasons don't suffice in answering the question why I collect antique pottery, perhaps this simple explanation will do...Maybe I'm just as quirky and unique as some of the pieces I collect!

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