- Roseville pottery
The Roseville Pottery Company was an American
pottery manufacturer in the 19th and 20th centuries. Though originally simple household pieces, the design of the pottery was popular with the American Arts and Crafts movement and pieces are now sought after by collectors.History
The company was founded by J.F. Weaver in
Roseville, Ohio in 1890. It was incorporated in 1892 with George Young, a former Roseville salesman, as secretary and general manager.cite web |title= Roseville:America's Decorative Art Pottery|publisher=Wisconsin Pottery Association|url=http://www.wisconsinpottery.org/Roseville/Experimental/roseville-pr.htm] Under the direction of Young, the Roseville company had great success producingstoneware flower pots and other practical household items. In 1895, the company expanded by purchasing Midland Pottery, and by 1896 George Young had amassed a controlling interest in Roseville Pottery. In 1898, they purchased the Clark Stoneware Company in Zanesville, and moved the headquarters there.cite book|title=Roseville In All Its Splendor|author=John Bomm|year=1998|publisher=L-W Publishing|isbn=0895380951]In 1900 George Young hired Ross C. Purdy to create the company's first art pottery line - Rozane.cite book|title=Collectors Encyclopedia of Roseville Pottery, Vol.2|author=Robert & Sharon Huxford|page=7|isbn=1574322354|year=2001|publisher=Collector Books] The Rozane art line was designed to compete against Rookwood Pottery's Standard Glaze, Owens Pottery's Utopian, and Weller Pottery's Louwelsa art lines. The name Rozane was created as a contraction of "Roseville" and "Zanesville". By 1901, the company owned and operated four plants and employed 325 people.
Frederick Hurten Rhead was theart director of Roseville between 1904 and 1909. He is associated with the "Della Robbia" line. (At the time of writing one of Rhead's vases holds the record as the most expensive piece of American art pottery: however, this is a piece from the studio pottery which Rhead established in California years after he left Roseville).Fact|date=July 2008 Frederick's brother Harry Rhead stayed on at Weller.Frank Ferrell became the art director for Roseville in 1917 and was responsible for creating many of the most popular Roseville designs.cite web |title= Roseville:America's Decorative Art Pottery|publisher=Wisconsin Pottery Association|url=http://www.wisconsinpottery.org/Roseville/Experimental/roseville-pr.htm] Among the most popular designs created by Roseville are Blackberry, Sunflower, and Pinecone. [cite web|title=Uncommon Clay: Ohio Art Pottery|publisher=Kent State University Museum|url=http://dept.kent.edu/museum/exhibit/pottery/pottery.html#roseville]
Following
World War II , the use of synthetic materials likemelamine resin in dinnerware caused a decline in the pottery industry. [cite web|title=The Rise and Fall of Melamine Tableware|author=Steve Akhurst|publisher=Plastics Historical Society|url=http://www.plastiquarian.com/styr3n3/pqs/pq32.htm|year=2004] Roseville Pottery produced its final designs in 1953, and the following year their facilities were bought by the Mosaic Tile Company.Collectors
Since the company closed, Roseville pottery has seen two distinct revivals: one with
baby boomer s in the 1970s, and again in the late 1990s and early 2000s during the Mission Style revival.Today, many Roseville styles remain relatively common while rare pieces can fetch hundreds or even thousands of dollars. Because Roseville's designs were so influential, replicas and counterfeits are common, and the wide variety of kiln markings—or the lack thereof—on genuine pieces can be confusing for collectors.cite book|title=Roseville In All Its Splendor|author=John Bomm|year=1998|publisher=L-W Publishing|isbn=0895380951] [cite web|title=Roseville for Beginners|publisher=Country Living|url=http://magazines.ivillage.com/countryliving/collect/expert/qas/0,,284647_525300,00.html|author=Marie Proeller Hueston]
Gallery
References
External links
* [http://www.coololdstuff.com/roseville2.html Roseville markings and styles]
* [http://antiques.about.com/cs/pottery/a/aa012200.htm History and identification]
* [http://www.gustavstickley.com/roseville-pottery.html History, identification, pricing]
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