Volume 11 $3.00 - Catawba Valley Pottery and Antiques Festival
Transcription
Volume 11 $3.00 - Catawba Valley Pottery and Antiques Festival
Volume 11 $3.00 15TH ANNUAL CATAWBA VALLEY POTTERY & ANTIQUES FESTIVAL S C H E D U L E 2012 O F E V E N T S SATURDAY 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM 9:00 - 5:00 Festival shops benefiting the Catawba County Historical Association and the NC Pottery Center 9:00 - 5:00 Exhibit: Committee’s Choice: Pots from Festival Organizers 11:00 Lecture: Daniel Johnston Thai Wheel Method 11:00 - 3:00 Pottery Demonstrations 1:00 - 4:00 Pottery and Antique Identification, Brunk Auctions 4:00 Door Prize Drawing Photo Courtesy of Daniel Johnston Program Credits PROGRAM DESIGN Don’t miss the Committee’s Choice Exhibit: Pots from Festival Organizers Jennifer Toney, Nice Try Designs CONTRIBUTORS Julie Butler Allen Huffman Barry Huffman Daniel Johnston Sid Luck Loy Sellers Terry Zug PRINTING Village Printing, Asheboro, NC Owner:Allen Huffman AD SALES Julie Butler Owner:Terry Zug Owner:Sid Luck 1 SPONSORS OF THE 2012 CATAW BA VALLEY POTTERY & ANTIQUES FESTIVAL 2 March 23-24, 2012 15TH ANNUAL CATAWBA VALLEY POTTERY & ANTIQUES FESTIVAL A presentation of the Catawba County Historical Association and the North Carolina Pottery Center Catawba County Historical Association · P.O. Box 73 · Newton, NC 28658 · Phone: (828) 465-0383 · Fax: (828) 465-8477 North Carolina Pottery Center · P.O. Box 531 · Seagrove, NC 27341-0531 · Phone: (336) 873-8430 · Fax: (336) 873-8530 Welcome to the 15th annual Catawba Valley Pottery & Antiques Festival. The Festival committee is very glad that you have joined us to celebrate our mile stone of providing one of the largest juried pottery and antiques shows in the state of North Carolina for the past 15 years. The Festival is: A fundraising event that supports programming, exhibits and general operation needs for the Catawba County Historical Association located in Newton, NC and the North Carolina Pottery Center located in Seagrove, NC An educational experience with an annual lecture and exhibit Always held on the fourth Saturday in March A not for profit committee comprised of volunteers Attended by vendors from throughout the Southeastern US The Festival committee wishes to thank: Festival sponsor Peoples Bank and Tony Wolfe for their many years of support Festival sponsor WNNC Crown Plaza for the generous Potters Reception Andrew Brunk and Brunk Auctions of Asheville, NC for the pottery and antique evaluations Matt Jones, Daniel Johnston and Kim Ellington for the donation of pottery for the sponsor drawing Village Printing of Asheboro, NC Terry Zug for providing the annual program guide essay and other supporting materials as well as the Educational Exhibit Daniel Johnston for the 2012 educational lecture Special thanks to Sid Luck for providing the materials needed for the pottery demonstration and thanks to all the potters that participate - thank you Sid and Loy Sellers for always making sure the program guide arrives at the Festival Special recognition to the staffs of the CCHA and the NCPC for providing support to the Festival committee Sincere appreciation for all the program guide advertisers On a final note, thank you for coming to Hickory, NC. The Festival has been fortunate to raise approximately $400,000 of support for the CCHA and the NCPC. Your attendance today continues to support the committee’s mission of providing a venue for potters, dealers, and antiques enthusiasts to meet and market their wares annually. 2012 PLANNING COMMITTEE Julie Butler, Brenda K. Cline, Marc Dagenhardt, Heather Deckelnick, Jane Gavin, Rebecca Hart, Melinda Herzog, Allen W. Huffman, Jr., Barry Huffman, Daniel F. Huffman, Charles Lisk, Betty Lohr, Sid Luck, Michelle Palmore, Jane Pekman, Jennie Pekman, Carol Preston, Loy Sellers, Leslie J. Stogner, Celeste Watts, David Whitley, Terry Zug 3 4 5 6 7 8 Most of our exhibitions at the Catawba Valley Pottery & Antiques Festival have been tightly focused and frequently related to our guest speaker. Over the years we have featured Catawba Indian pottery, Burlon Craig, pots for plants, face jugs, earthenware, and the alkaline glaze. This year, however, we thought we’d do something different. The hard-working members of the Festival committee are obviously passionate about pots. They have to be—they volunteer their time and labor, and they meet all year round (well, we do take a few months off in the summer). So we thought it would be interesting to ask each of them to select a favorite pot and then explain their choice. Owner: Marc Dagenhardt > EXHIBITION: “Committee’s Choice: Pottery from the Festival Organizers” Most members of the committee live in the Hickory area, so it is not surprising to find a preference for Catawba Valley pots and the alkaline glaze (Burlon and Don Craig, Annie Mae Hilton, Charlie Lisk, Joe Reinhardt, Frank Seagle). But Seagrove scored well too, with works by Sid and Jason Luck, David Farrell, and Crystal King. In all, only four pots were not from North Carolina—two salt-glazed, 19th century forms from the Northeast, a Georgia Rebecca pitcher, and a platter from Ireland decorated with designs from the Book of Kells. We are clearly a parochial lot! Also noteworthy, only two face jugs appear (and one snake jug too). The committee opted for more classic forms, like the jug, jar, vase, and pitcher. But there are a couple of interesting figurals: an Uncle Sam holding an elephant and a donkey, and one very realistic shoe (Loy Sellers will have to explain that one). Finally, only five antique pots appear, two from up North and three from North Carolina. The committee strongly preferred the work of contemporary potters and chose seven made by regulars at the Festival. As Marc Dagenhardt explains, “I chose this pot [a vase by Matt Jones] because it is by a contemporary potter and to emphasize that works like it are readily available at this show.” Why do we collect? There are many reasons: a reaction against industry, a love of the handmade object, or nostalgia for an earlier time. Judging by their comments, committee members collect pots primarily because they evoke strong personal connections. Jane Gavin purchased a 19th century jug from Whately, MA, because “Whately” was her mother’s maiden name (she’s lucky it wasn’t Seagle, or she would have paid a lot more). For Brenda Cline, her multi-handled vase was a special gift “commissioned by my husband Dale from dear friend and potter Charlie Lisk. It was presented to me at the 2008 Pottery Festival Preview Party.” Finally, Sid Luck, selected a Rebecca pitcher as a memorial to Bobby Ferguson, “an old friend of mine who was a north Georgia potter descended from the Craven family in North Carolina.” (Continued on page 10) Owner: Jane Gavin > 9 COMMITTEE’S CHOICE: POTTERY FROM THE FESTIVAL ORGANIZERS Buying a piece of pottery in North Carolina is always much more than an economic transaction. After all, we visit with potters in their shops and homes, and frequently a close friendship results. Julie Butler chose a pitcher made by Sid Luck because it “has been such an honor to work with him on the Festival committee. His calm demeanor, sly wit, and no-nonsense manner not only make him an asset to our committee, but I certainly see his personality reflected in his work.” Likewise, for Heather Deckelnick, “it was with Sid Luck that my first true interaction with a North Carolina potter was made.” Her monkey face jug “began my now ongoing love and collection of North Carolina pottery.” In short, for most of us buying a pot affirms a social bond, one that is continually reaffirmed in the many kiln openings found all across the state. < Owner: Leslie Stogner Owner: David Whitley > Unlike our ancestors who purchased pots for daily use in their homes and on their farms, we are much more likely to focus on the artistry of a well turned form. Reflecting on a salt-glazed jug made by Jason Luck, David Whitley observes that “this is a very simple jug but well made. The form has been made countless times, but when it is done right, it speaks to you.” In like manner, Allen Huffman praises a jar by Frank Seagle: “classic late 19th century Catawba Valley alkaline glaze ‘look,’ with great shape and glaze and light weight.” That “classic look”—a bold, well balanced, neatly trimmed form with a richly textured surface—remains central today to North Carolina pottery. No other embellishments are necessary. But there were early potters who went beyond necessity, like Annie Mae Ritchie Hilton, wife of Floyd Hilton. Barry Huffman has featured a vase with floral decoration by Annie Mae, and she explains why. “A woman of her time and circumstance, she drew from within herself an amazing flow of creativity. She created lovely vessels that moved her world, and ours, to a softer, richer place. From the harsh realities of the Depression, she left us a small but delightful garden filled with mysterious pots.” We can hardly ask for more. < Owner: Barry Huffman Owner: Loy Sellers > We hope you will take the time to explore “Committee’s Choice” and read the full comments about the pots on display. And if you have a moment, you might thank the committee members for all the work they do to organize this magnificent Festival, itself a delightful garden. Owner: Betty Lohr 10 MORE COMMITTEE’S CHOICE < Owner: Charlie Lisk Owner: Allen Huffman Owner: Heather Deckelnick 11 Photo Courtesy of Daniel Johnston 12 2 0 1 2 C ATA W B A VA L L E Y P O T T E R Y F E S T I VA L F E AT U R E D S P E A K E R Daniel Johnston Our speaker for 2012 is Daniel Johnston, a well-known Seagrove potter, a macho maker of large jars, and a regular at the Catawba Valley Pottery Festival. He is only the second potter to address us, the first being his former mentor, Mark Hewitt. Daniel headed into pottery at an unusually early age. At 16 he quit school and purchased a ten acre tract of land on a rural hilltop in southern Randolph County. Needing money to pay for his purchase, he then went to work for J.B. Cole’s Pottery, where he learned the meaning of production pottery. He estimates that he made 30,000 small pieces of pottery per year during a two-year stint! This whetted his appetite to learn more, and so in 1997 he headed east to Pittsboro to work alongside Mark Hewitt, an important apprenticeship that lasted for four years. Daniel also took time off in 1999 to go to England and work for North Devon potter Clive Bowen, who is particularly renowned for his slip decorating. Today Daniel works in his shop on that beautiful, green hilltop that he wisely purchased so many years ago. Ably assisted by Kate Waltman, John Vigeland, and Terry Childress, he produces a great variety of stoneware forms, ranging from tablewares to grave markers to giant planters, and he fires his salt and alkaline glazes in a large, woodburning kiln. Like Mark he uses local clays because they offer “a connection to the many potters that dug clay in the Seagrove area before me. The variation and inconsistency of minimally refined clay gives a richness and beauty to the pots.” In the summer of 2010, Daniel launched an ambitious Large Jar Project, during which he made 100 35-40 gallon jars and jugs, using 11,000 pounds of clay, 800 pounds of salt, and 30 cords of slab wood. On October 22 he lined these massive forms up along the road in front of his shop, in what has to be one of the most stunning displays of North Carolina pottery ever. You can see all phases of this challenging project—from mixing the clay to the crowds that appeared to buy the next day—on his excellent website (www.danieljohnstonpottery.com). Mark’s rigorous training prepared Daniel to open his own shop, but he decided that he needed one more apprenticeship. Thanks to Mark and ceramic scholar Louise Cort, in 2003 he was able to travel to Phon Bok, Thailand, a remote region in the northeast, where he worked with a traditional potter named Sawein Silakhom. Mostly they produced large water jars and fish paste jars that were essential to the daily life of local communities. Daniel went there, he explains, because he wanted to get back to the roots of pottery making, to experience a true folk tradition where there were no curators or exhibitions or concerns about aesthetics. In essence, this would have been like going back to Seagrove in the 19th century and working for J.D. Craven or Evan Cole. On Saturday morning at 11:00AM, Daniel will discuss his work in Thailand and on the Large Jar Project, using color images to illustrate his points. And then he will demonstrate how to turn a large jar with coils on an authentic Thai wheel (essentially two sections of a tree trunk with a wooden pin between them). You don’t want to miss this presentation! Photo Courtesy of Daniel Johnston 13 A L P H A B E T I C A L VENDOR NAME A Little Above the Bottom BOOTH # 17-18 V E N D O R VENDOR NAME BOOTH # L I S T I N G VENDOR NAME BOOTH # Farm House Pottery 21 Odd Designs 106 A. Griffin Pottery 107 Freechild Studio 13 Ole Fish House Pottery 65 A. V. Smith Pottery 76 From the Ground Up 9 Out of the Ashes Pottery 20 Aberson Pottery 113 Gary Mitchell Pottery 89 P. Rowe Pottery 72 Addington Pottery 64 Hallyburton Pottery 62 Paradox Pottery 114 Adrienne Dellinger Pottery 67 Hamilton Williams Clayworks 60 Phil Morgan Pottery 50 Haventree Antiques 27 Potters Pond Pottery 52 American Spirit Antiques 92-93 B. R. Hilton Pottery 25 Heafner Pottery 112 Pottery by Eugene Bailey’s Pottery 115 Hog Hill Pottery 26 Pottery by Leslie Jamison Barbara Miller Pottery 94 Jack T. Maness Pottery 73 Pottery by Sybil Batton Clayworks 35 JCR Designs 117 Potteryman Black Dog Pottery 38 Jeff Young Pottery 97 Puzzle Creek Pottery Bolick and Traditions Pottery 36 Jim Spires Pottery 104 Ram Pottery 51 Bristow Pottery 55 JLK Jewelry at Jugtown Pottery 105 Ray Pottery 77 Brown’s Pottery 70 John Saunders Pottery 102 Red Clay Gallery 28 Caldwell-Hohl Artworks 96 Jones Pottery, Ltd. 40 Rising Fawn Folk Art Gallery 122 Catawba Indian Pottery 84 Joseph Sand Pottery 32 Roberts Southern Pottery 45 Catawba River Trader Antiques 78-80 23-24 111 22 11-12 100 Kaye T. Waltman Pottery 87 Rose Hill Pottery 120 Chad Brown Pottery 58 Kathy Richards Pottery 61 Sandhills Pottery 71 Chad Smith Pottery 19 Keeping Room Antiques 41 Seagrove Stoneware 68-69 Charles Lisk Pottery 10 King’s Pottery 3-4 Sedberry Pottery Inc 8 Charlie Tefft Pottery 49 Kovack Pottery 110 Stacy’s Folk Art Pottery 39 Claysmith Pottery 109 Lane & Hamilton Antiques 108 Steve Abee Pottery 33 Cornell Art Pottery 53 Leftwich Pottery 85 Tammy Leigh Pottery 1-2 Leicester Valley Clay 14 The Great White Oak Gallery 66 Courtney Long Crocker Folk Pottery 124 30-31 Liberty Stoneware 88 Throw and Sew Cross Creek Pottery 59 Little Mountain Pottery 54 Tom Phelps Crystal King Pottery 5 Lovejoy Pottery 83 Triple C Pottery 95 CVCC Potters’ Workshop 99 Lowery 101 Turpin Pottery 48 Daniel Johnston Pottery 86 Luck’s Ware 37 Turtle Island Pottery McWhirter Pottery 44 Uwharrie Crystalline Pottery 16 W.M. Hewitt Pottery 81 Walker-Mourglea Pottery 121 David Blackburn 46-47 56 118-119 74-75 Dean and Martin Pottery 90 Michel Bayne Pottery 6 Dedmond & Guseman 63 Moose Hollow Pottery 116 Doe Ridge Pottery 29 Mosquito Hawk Pottery 78 Walter Fleming Pottery 7 Dogwood Antiques 34 Mud Duck Pottery 91 Wayne Hewell Pottery 103 Down to Earth Pottery 57 Mud Puppies Pottery 123 Wood’s Wheel Pottery 82 East Fork Pottery / Alex Matisse 15 North Cole Pottery 42 Ellington Pottery 98 Not Your Average Antiques 43 14 15 B O O T H L AY O U T & V E N D O R S 2012 Catawba Valley Pottery & Antiques Festival SHOW ENTRANCE BOOTH # VENDOR NAME SHOW ENTRANCE BOOTH # LOCATION VENDOR NAME LOCATION 1-2 ........... Tammy Leigh Pottery · Hickory, NC 20 ............ Out of the Ashes Pottery · Hickory, NC 3-4 .......... King’s Pottery · Seagrove, NC 21 ............ Farm House Pottery · Reidsville, NC 5 .............. Crystal King Pottery · Asheboro, NC 22 ............ Pottery by Sybil · Granite Falls, NC 6 .............. Michel Bayne Pottery · Lincolnton, NC 23-24 ...... Pottery by Eugene · Cowpens, SC 7 .............. Walter Fleming Pottery · Statesville, NC 25 ............ B. R. Hilton Pottery · Newton, NC 8 .............. Sedberry Pottery, Inc. · Bakersville, NC 26 ............ Hog Hill Pottery · Vale, NC 9 .............. From the Ground Up · Robbins, NC 27 ............ Haventree · Raleigh, NC 10 ............. Charles Lisk Pottery · Vale, NC 28 ............ Red Clay Gallery · Clover, NC 11-12 ........ Potteryman · Gillsville, GA 29 ............ Doe Ridge Pottery · Boone, NC 13 ............. Freechild Studio · Knightdale, NC 30-31 ....... Crocker Folk Pottery · Gillsville, GA 14 ............ Leicester Valley Clay · Leicester, NC 32 ............ Joseph Sand Pottery · Randleman, NC 15 ............ East Fork Pottery / Alex Matisse · Marshall, NC 33 .............Steve Abee Pottery · Lenoir, NC 16 ............. Uwharrie Crystalline Pottery · Seagrove, NC 34 ............ Dogwood Antiques · Morganton, NC 17-18 ....... A Little Above the Bottom · Swannanoa, NC 35 .............Batton Clayworks · Asheville, NC 19 ............. Chad Smith Pottery · Lawndale, NC 36 ............ Bolick and Traditions Pottery · Lenoir, NC 16 BOOTH # VENDOR NAME BOOTH # LOCATION VENDOR NAME, LOCATION 37 ............. Luck’s Ware · Seagrove, NC 83 ............ Lovejoy Pottery · Wendell, NC 38 ............ Black Dog Pottery · Asheboro, NC 84 ............ Catawba Indian Pottery · Rock Hill, SC 39 ............ Stacy’s Folk Art Pottery · Asheboro, NC 85 ............ Leftwich Pottery · Mills River, NC 40 ............ Jones Pottery, Ltd. · Leicester, NC 86 ............ Daniel Johnston Pottery · Seagrove, NC 41 ............. Keeping Room Antiques · Charlotte, NC 87 ............ Kaye T. Waltman Pottery · Seagrove, NC 42 ............ North Cole Pottery · Sanford, NC 88 ............ Liberty Stoneware · Liberty, NC 43 ............ Not Your Average Antiques · Asheville, NC 89 ............ Gary Mitchell Pottery · Conover, NC 44 ............ McWhirter Pottery · Burnsville, NC 90 ............ Dean and Martin Pottery · Seagrove, NC 45 ............ Roberts Southern Pottery · Weaverville, NC 91 ............. Mud Duck Pottery · Mt. Airy, NC 46-47 ...... David Blackburn · Asheboro, NC 92-93 ...... American Spirit Antiques · Murphy, NC 48 ............ Turpin Pottery · Homer, GA 94 ............ Barbara Miller Pottery · Lenoir, NC 49 ............ Charlie Tefft Pottery · Greensboro, NC 95 ............ Triple C Pottery · Eagle Springs, NC 50 ............ Phil Morgan Pottery · Seagrove, NC 96 ............ Caldwell-Hohl Artworks · Seagrove, NC 51 ............. Ram Pottery · Creston, NC 97 ............ Jeff Young Pottery · Vale, NC 52 ............ Potters Pond Pottery · Knoxville, TN 98 ............ Ellington Pottery · Vale, NC 53 ............ Cornell Art Pottery · Landrum, SC 99 ............ CVCC Potters’ Workshop · Hickory, NC 54 ............ Little Mountain Pottery · Tryon, NC 100 .......... Puzzle Creek Pottery · Bostic, NC 55 ............ Bristow Pottery · Eagle Springs, NC 101 ........... Lowery · Catawba, NC 56 ............ Throw and Sew · Elkin, NC 102 ...........John Saunders Pottery · Hudson, NC 57 ............ Down to Earth Pottery · Carthage, NC 103 ........... Wayne Hewell Pottery · Gillsville, GA 58 ............ Chad Brown Pottery · Seagrove, NC 104 .......... Jim Spires Pottery · Wooster, OH 59 ............ Cross Creek Pottery · Seagrove, NC 105 ...........JLK Jewelry at Jugtown Pottery · Seagrove, NC 60 ............ Hamilton Williams Clayworks · Valdese, NC 106 ...........Odd Designs · Wagram, NC 61 ............. Kathy Richards Pottery · Lincolnton, NC 107 ........... A. Griffin Pottery · Shelby, NC 62 ............ Hallyburton Pottery · Durham, NC 108 .......... Lane & Hamilton Antiques · Raleigh, NC 63 ............ Dedmond & Guseman · Lawndale, NC 109 .......... Claysmith Pottery · Candler, NC 64 ............ Addington Pottery · Hendersonville, NC 110 ........... Kovack Pottery · Seagrove, NC 65 ............ Ole Fish House Pottery · Seagrove, NC 111 ............ Pottery by Leslie Jamison · Hickory, NC 66 ............ The Great White Oak Gallery · Seagrove, NC 112 ........... Heafner Pottery · Cherryville, NC 67 ............ Adrienne Dellinger Pottery · Charlotte, NC 113 ............Aberson Pottery · Concord, NC 68-69 ...... Seagrove Stoneware · Seagrove, NC 114 ........... Paradox Pottery · Horse Shoe, NC 70 ............ Brown’s Pottery · Arden, NC 115 ........... Bailey’s Pottery · Lancaster, SC 71 ............. Sandhills Pottery · McBee, SC 116 ........... Moose Hollow Pottery · Thomasville, NC 72 .............P. Rowe Pottery · Greensboro, GA 117 ............ JCR Designs · Asheville, NC 73 ............. Jack T. Maness Pottery · Asheboro, NC 118-119 .... Tom Phelps · Floyd, VA 74-75 ...... Turtle Island Pottery · Black Mountain, NC 120 .......... Rose Hill Pottery · Dallas, NC 76 .............A. V. Smith Pottery · Sanford, NC 121 ........... Walker-Mourglea Pottery · Vale, NC 77 ............. Ray Pottery · Seagrove, NC 122 ...........Rising Fawn Folk Art Gallery · Lookout Mt., TN 78 ............ Mosquito Hawk Pottery · York, SC 123 ........... Mud Puppies Pottery · Sylva, NC 79-80 ...... Catawba River Trader Antiques · Lincolnton, NC 124 .......... Courtney Long · Morganton, NC 81 ............. W.M. Hewitt Pottery · Pittsboro, NC 82 ............ Wood’s Wheel Pottery · Raleigh, NC 17 CATAWBA VALLEY POTTERY & ANTIQUES FESTIVAL PREVIEW PARTY - 2012 The Catawba Valley Pottery & Antiques Festival presents the Friday Night Preview Party from 7-10pm. The party is a fundraiser for the host institutions: the Catawba County Historical Association and the North Carolina Pottery Center. An evening of entertainment, the event features a great barbeque dinner, music and an early buying opportunity. Tickets for the Preview Party are sold in advance due to the planning required. Tickets are not sold at the door. Invitations are mailed to previous attendees. A sign-up sheet may be found at the door prize table if you would like your name added to the invitation list for next year or call 828-324-7294. THANK YOU! Thank you Sigmon Stringers for making music with and for us at the Preview Party. www.SigmonStringers.com Special thanks to Brenda Cline and Betty Lohr for all of their hard work organizing the annual Preview Party. 18 19 The North Carolina Pottery Center is proud to be a partner in the Catawba Valley Pottery Festival. The Catawba County Historical Association and the Pottery Center share an appreciation for the history, heritage and ongoing tradition of pottery-making in North Carolina. Together, we work to promote public awareness of this great tradition. Potters were essential craftsmen in most states until the late nineteenth century, but the Industrial Revolution forced the majority of them out of business. In North Carolina, however, the wheels never stopped turning. Excellent clays, strong family networks, and a remarkable ability to adapt to new tastes in a changing marketplace enabled the potters to survive hard times and once again flourish. In the last fifty years, the state has become a mecca for young potters from across the country, creating a new and diverse generation to grow that clay heritage. The Center, which opened in 1998, was made possible by pottery advocates from across the state and beyond, with more than $750,000 in capital funds through state government. During the past ten years, the Center has received funding support from the North Carolina Arts Council, Randolph County, our membership, grants, the annual benefit auction , and the Catawba Valley Pottery Festival. NCPC serves a diverse audience which includes the general public, school groups, special tour groups, collectors, scholars, and most importantly, the Center represents the more than 1,000 North Carolina potters and their wide-ranging and diverse styles and traditions. We continue to develop opportunities to increase economic growth within pottery-related communities. In 2011 some 7,600 adults and children toured the Center’s exhibitions and attended workshops, lectures, artists’ receptions, and related activities. Visitors came from 48 states and 21 foreign countries, clear testimony to the fame of the North Carolina pottery tradition. We invite you to visit our current exhibit at the Center, “What’s Upstairs? Seeing the NCPC’s Hidden Treasures,” which showcases our permanent collection. Come on Saturday, March 10 and April 14, from 12-2 for a lecture and pottery identification clinic. Museum Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 10 am - 4 pm Business Hours: Monday - Friday 8:30 am - 5 pm (Closed major holidays) Email: [email protected] Phone: (336) 873-8430 www.ncpotterycenter.org Mailing Address: P.O. Box 531 Seagrove, NC 27341 Manager: Paulette Badgett 20 The Planning Committee would like to say “Thank You” to the volunteers who create the beautiful flower arrangements for the Festival each year! Make plans to attend the 16th Annual Catawba Valley POTTERY & ANTIQUES FESTIVAL March 23, 2013 Always the 4th weekend in March 21 22 Photo Courtesy of Catawba County Historical Association 23 Photo Courtesy of Catawba County Historical Association 24 25 26 Views from previous Catawba Valley Pottery & Antiques Festivals Photos Courtesy of Catawba County Historical Association 27 Photo Courtesy of Daniel Johnston Limited Edition T-SHIRTS & TOTE BAGS 2012 VENDOR BUSINESS CAR D DI R ECTO R Y are now available at the Catawba Valley Pottery & Antiques Festival. Featuring images of vessels made by legendary Southern traditional potters, a new design will be offered for sale every two years. Start your collection today! *Supplies are limited. Booth 107 Booths 92-93 Booth 25 28 Booth 36 Booth 55 Booths 79-80 Booth 19 Booth 124 Booths 30-31 Booth 5 Booths 46-47 29 Booth 57 Booth 15 Booth 21 Booth 13 Booth 60 Booth 112 Booth 26 Booth 73 30 Booth 102 Booth 40 Booths 3-4 Booth 108 Booth 14 Booth 83 Booth 37 Booth 78h 31 Booth 91 Booth 106 Booth 50 Booth 22 Booth 51 Booth 71 Booth 56 Booth 16 32