George Ohr, Art Potter: The Apostle of Individuality, by Robert
A. Ellison Jr, Scala Publishers Limited, distributed by Antique
Collector's Club Limited, 116 Pleasant Street, Suite 60 B,
Easthampton MA 01027; 2006, 176 pages, $65 hardcover.
Just as a great deal of the "art pottery" produced prior to and
just after the turn of the Twentieth Century can easily be
considered merely "pottery," the unique pots produced by George
Ohr during this same period must truly be considered "art." And
just as Jim Carpenter did in 1972 when he bought the lifetime
collection of Ohr pottery from the heirs and brought it to the
attention of the collecting world, Ellison, through his efforts
with this recent book, brings the potter's artistic achievements
into clear view.
Accomplished in typical form, Ellison has pleasingly set forth in
this tome more than three decades worth of his thorough research
and wonderful photography.
The author has organized more than a dozen chapters in a
chronological format beginning with "The Early Years" and ending
with "A Last Word." Other chapters deal with the symmetry of the
pots, the devastating fire that burned Ohr's pottery and the
effects it had on him, the amazing colors, glazes and surfaces
that the potter achieved, handles as art, the potter's marks and,
appropriately, "The Pot as Sculpture."
Recognizing the importance of Ohr as a master sculptor, whom
Ellison claims was "approximately 64 years ahead of his time,"
and the Modernist movement that would seemingly follow the
potter's lead, is secured in this book not only through the
informative text, but also via the author's exquisite
photography. Tracing his forms through numerous periods and the
experimentation with glazes and surfaces, the images document
many of the potter's most important works. Throughout the book
are also a large number of period photographs of the potter, not
only the ones commonly seen of the "Mad Potter from Biloxi"
hamming it up in front of the camera, but also important
documentary images of a serious businessman and his wares.
"I am making pottery for art sake, the future generation and...
for my own satisfaction," proclaimed Ohr in an article in the
pages of The China, Glass and Pottery Review, "but when I'm
gone... my work will be prized, honored and cherished." What Ohr
prophesized has come true; Ellison's efforts respectfully pay
homage.
-DSS