Talking with the Turners : Conversations with Southern Folk Potters

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2006-01-31
Publisher(s): Univ of South Carolina Pr
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Summary

Traveling the back roads of North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, Charles R. Mack spent the summer of 1981 talking with the potters who produced the face jugs, mugs, and plates that had skyrocketed in popularity in the late 1970s and collecting examples of their wares. He was, in effect, talking the pulse of a southern folkway on the brink of transition. With the benefit of a quarter century of hindsight, Mack has now gathered these interviews into Talking with the Turners, a single volume that documents the world of southern pottery as it shifted from the production of utilitarian wares to the aesthetic realm of folk art. In their own words the turners, most of whom are now deceased, explain what it means to be a potter, to be part of a profession that passes from generation to generation, to experiment with new designs while continuing to produce traditional forms of ceramics. Arranged thematically, the interviews emerge as an open dialogue among the participants--the type of backroom shoptalk that collectors and scholars are rarely privileged to share. In addition to the centerpiece interviews--many of which are also featured on an accompanying audio CD--Mack includes numerous color and black-and-white photographs of the potters, their shops, and their wares. Mack's extensive commentary sets these particular potters in the context of the larger American ceramics tradition, explains pottery techniques, and summarizes recent changes in pottery making. Talking with the Turners is augmented by an introduction by Lynn Robertson, director of the McKissick Museum at the University of South Carolina, and a foreword by William R. Ferris, the foundingdirector of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi.

Author Biography

Charles R. Mack has taught art history at the University of South Carolina since 1970, where he is a Louise Scudder Professor of Liberal Arts and the William Joseph Todd Professor of the Italian Renaissance.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations with Prefatory Note xiii
Foreword by William R. Ferris xvii
Preface xix
Acknowledgments xxvii
Introduction by Lynn Robertson xxxi
Commentary on the Turning Tradition 1(36)
Biographical Sketches of Those Interviewed 37(24)
THE TURNERS TALK - EXCERPTS FROM THE 1981 INTERVIEWS
On Being a Potter
61(4)
Interviews with Eric Miller, Bill Gordy, and Howard Connor
Family Origins and Family Ties
65(13)
Interviews with Walter Lee Cornelison, Verna Suggs Duncan, Hattie Mae Stewart Brown, Bill Gordy, Howard Connor, Harold Hewell, Robert Ferguson, Kenneth Outen, Ralph Miller, Carrie Stewart, Gerald Stewart, and Horace V. Brown Jr.
Growing Up and Being Trained
78(4)
Interviews with Norman Smith, Verna Suggs Duncan, Howard Connor, Boyd R. Hilton, and Wayne Wilson
Recollections of Changes and Transitions
82(4)
Interviews with D.X. Gordy, Horatio Boggs, Eric Miller, and Billy Joe Craven
Into the Business
86(7)
Interviews with Cleater Meaders, Gerald Stewart, Bill Gordy, Lanier Meaders, and Billy Joe Craven
The Distaff Side
93(8)
Interviews with Marie Rogers, Carrie Stewart, Verna Suggs Duncan, Edwin Meaders, Hattie Mae Stewart Brown, and Grace Hewell
From Clay Pit to Pot Shop
101(2)
Interviews with Edwin Meaders, Bill Gordy, Carrie Stewart, and Cleater Meaders
When They Turned
103(1)
Interviews with Marie Rogers and Horace V. Brown Jr.
How They Turned
104(12)
Interviews with Marie Rogers, Eric Miller, Harold and Chester Hewell, Edwin Meaders, Howard Connor, Cleater Meaders, Walter Lee Cornelison, Boyd S. Hilton, and Horace V. Brown Jr.
What They Turned
116(17)
Interviews with Carrie Stewart, Gerald Stewart, Verna Suggs Duncan, Hattie Mae Stewart Brown, Annette Brown Stevens, Kenneth Outen, Horace V. Brown Jr., Bill Gordy, Howard Connor, Lanier Meaders, Billy Joe Craven, Boyd S. Hilton, Harold Hewell, and Edwin Meaders
Innovations in Techniaue and Style
133(10)
Interviews with D. X. Gordy, Horace Brown Jr., Bill Gordy, Ada Adams Hewell, Wayne Wilson, and Arie Meaders
Glazing
143(13)
Interviews with Marie Rogers, D. X. Gordy, Eric Miller, Gerald Stewart, Verna Suggs Duncan, Hattie Mae Stewart Brown, Bill Gordy, Walter Lee Cornelison, Howard Connor, Horace V. Brown Jr., Jack Ada and Carl Hewell, Wayne Wilson, and Edwin Meaders
The Potter's Kiln
156(9)
Interviews with Lamar Franklin, Carrie Stewart, Walter Lee Cornelison, Gerald Stewart, Bill Gordy, Verna Suggs Duncan, Hattie Mae Stewart Brown, Howard Connor, Horace V. Brown Jr., Kenneth Outen, Harold Hewell, Lanier Meaders, and Edwin Meaders
Kiln Burning
165(6)
Interviews with D. X. Gordy, Gerald Stewart, Johnny Hudson, Marie Rogers, Howard Connor, and Edwin Meaders
Marketing Matters
171(9)
Interviews with Marie Rogers, Horatio Boggs, Ralph Miller, Norman Smith, Gerald Stewart, Eric Miller, Carrie Stewart, Verna Suggs Duncan, Hattie Mae Stewart Brown, Bill Gordy, Horace V. Brown Jr., Harold Hewell, Ada and Carl Hewell, and Billy Joe Craven
Turner Tales
180(9)
Interviews with Bill Gordy, Howard Connor, Horatio Boggs, Boyd S. Hilton, Lanier Meaders, and Horace V. Brown Jr.
What the Future Holds
189(8)
Interviews with Marie Rogers, Horatio Boggs, Oscar Smith, Gerald Stewart, Verna Suggs Duncan, Howard Connor, Harold Hewell, Hattie Mae Stewart Brown, Grace Hewell, Wayne Wilson, Henry Hewell, and Lanier Meaders
Epilogue: A Generation Later 197(8)
Appendix: Terms and Techniques 205(12)
Bibliography ibliography 217(6)
Index 223(13)
Talking with the Turners Audio CD Track List 236

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