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Jar

Asian Art Museum

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Object Details

Description

Early Pewabic jar.
Clay: dense.
Glaze: gray-green with an overflow of faint pink.

Label

The Pewabic Pottery was a ceramics workshop in Detroit established at the turn of the century. The primary aesthetic interest of its founder, Mary Chase Perry Stratton, was the art of glazing, or "painting with fire." Stratton's friend and patron Charles Lang Freer fostered her efforts by providing fragments of ancient Asian pots to emulate. Her mature works are clearly inspired by the surfaces and shapes of ceramics in Freer's collection, particularly the Islamic pottery known as Raqqa ware, with its distinctive iridescence. The surfaces also resonate with paintings in Freer's collection by James McNeill Whistler, Thomas Dewing, and Dwight Tryon.

Provenance

1918
Pewabic Pottery, 1918 [1]
From 1918 to 1919
Charles Lang Freer (1854-1919), purchased from Pewabic Pottery in 1918 [2]
From 1920
Freer Gallery of Art, gift of Charles Lang Freer in 1920 [3]
Notes:
[1] Object file. Present location of voucher unknown.
[2] See note 1.
[3] The original deed of Charles Lang Freer's gift was signed in 1906. The collection was received in 1920 upon the completion of the Freer Gallery.

Collection

Freer Gallery of Art Collection

Exhibition History

Dewing’s Poetic World (November 27, 2019 to May 29, 2022)
Pretty Women: Freer and the Ideal of Feminine Beauty (August 13, 2005 to September 17, 2006)
James McNeill Whistler at the Freer Gallery of Art (May 11, 1984 to December 5, 1984)
Pewabic Pottery (November 20, 1979 to March 5, 1981)
American Paintings (November 11, 1976 to October 12, 1978)
The Peacock Room (May 2, 1923 to February 21, 2011)

Previous custodian or owner

Pewabic Pottery (established 1903) (C.L. Freer source)
Charles Lang Freer (1854-1919)

Credit Line

Gift of Charles Lang Freer

Date

ca. 1918

Accession Number

F1918.162

Restrictions & Rights

Usage conditions apply

Type

Vessel

Medium

Glazed clay

Dimensions

H x Diam (overall): 16.3 x 12.7 cm (6 7/16 x 5 in)

Style

Pewabic ware

Origin

Detroit, Michigan, United States

Related Online Resources

Google Arts & Culture

See more items in

National Museum of Asian Art

Data Source

National Museum of Asian Art

Topic

ceramic
Pewabic ware
United States
glazed
American Art
Charles Lang Freer collection

Metadata Usage

Usage conditions apply

Link to Original Record

http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ye3fb2eb053-8fc9-4bd2-87a3-9c4cae5e079f

Record ID

fsg_F1918.162

Discover More

Roseville Pottery

American Art Pottery: Useful and Beautiful

Roseville Pottery

Selected Bibliography

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