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George Ohr, Vase, circa 1900
Vase
George Ohr, Vase, circa 1900
George Ohr, Vase, circa 1900
DepartmentAmerican Art

Vase

Artist (1857 - 1919)
Datecirca 1900
MediumEarthenware, altered and glazed
DimensionsOverall: 6 1/2 × 21 7/16 in. (16.5 × 54.5 cm)
Credit LineGift of the Jordan Volpe Gallery
CopyrightPublic Domain
Object number1984.2.7
DescriptionOhr (1857-1919) shaped on the potter's wheel a bulbous earthenware vase with everted neck, then altered the form by twisting the neck, crimping the rim, and impressing eight "petals" in a circle to make an conventional eight-lobed flower on one side. The vase is covered overall with a dark green glaze having a vaguely iridescent surface. Ohr has long been hailed for his modernity, which may be defined generally by his rejection of the tyranny of the potter's wheel. As early as 1884, Ohr proclaimed his goal to make "no two [pieces] alike" in an era when potteries hoped to achieve a recognizable style of clay-handling, coloration, and motif in order to establish a niche in a competitive market. Although he expertly shaped his ware on a potter's wheel in the round, he then altered the form to demonstrate his denial of the classical standards to which most other potters of the time subscribed. His sources were contemporary and varied coming from a wide range of geographic locations, including England (Christopher Dresser's designs for Linthorpe Pottery, which were shown at the New Orleans Exhibition in 1884-85), rural Pennsylvania and the Midwest (traditional utilitarian potter's fair novelties and off-hand work), and Victorian porcelain with frilly rims and fancy handles. His twisting and crimping effects are decidedly Victorian in their excess.
ProvenanceFrom 1984
Reynolda House Museum of American Art, Winston Salem, NC, given by the Jordan Volpe Gallery in 1984. [1]

Notes:
[1] Email correspondence with Barbara B. Millhouse, March 19, 2012.
Exhibition History
Published References
Status
On view
Rookwood Pottery Company, Pitcher, 1890
Rookwood Pottery Company
1890
Floor Vase
circa 1700
Anne Frances Simpson, Newcomb Pottery, Vase, 1929
Newcomb Pottery
1929
Edward T. Hurley, Rookwood Pottery Company, Vase, 1908
Edward T. Hurley
1908
Nam June Paik, Leonardo da Vinci, 1991
Nam June Paik
1991
William Merritt Chase, In the Studio, circa 1884
William Merritt Chase
circa 1884
Jasper Johns, M, 1972
Jasper Johns
1972
Elliott Daingerfield, The Spirit of the Storm, circa 1912
Elliott Daingerfield
circa 1912
Elihu Vedder, Dancing Girl, 1871
Elihu Vedder
1871
Eugène Pirou, Katharine Smith Reynolds, 1905
Eugène Pirou
1905