Talking with the Turners

Talking with the Turners
Conversations with Southern Folk Potters

Charles R. Mack
Introduction by Lynn Robertson Foreword by William R. Ferris

A folk pottery pilgrimage that finds a southern art form at a crossroads

6 x 9, 272 pages, 26 color plates, 61 black & white photos, audio CD
cloth, ISBN 1-57003-600-4, $45.00t

About the Book

About the Author

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Also from the Author

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ABOUT THE BOOK

Traveling the back roads of North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, Charles R. Mack spent the summer of 1981 talking with the potters who produced the face jugs, mugs, and plates that had skyrocketed in popularity in the late 1970s and collecting examples of their wares. He was, in effect, taking the pulse of a southern folkway on the brink of transition.

With the benefit of a quarter century of hindsight, Mack has now gathered these interviews into Talking with the Turners, a single volume that documents the world of southern pottery as it shifted from the production of utilitarian wares to the aesthetic realm of folk art. In their own words the turners, most of whom are now deceased, explain what it means to be a potter, to be part of a profession that passes from generation to generation, to experiment with new designs while continuing to produce traditional forms of ceramics. Arranged thematically, the interviews emerge as an open dialogue among the participants—the type of backroom shoptalk that collectors and scholars are rarely privileged to share.

In addition to the centerpiece interviews—many of which are also featured on an accompanying audio CD—Mack includes numerous color and black-and-white photographs of the potters, their shops, and their wares. Mack's extensive commentary sets these particular potters in the context of the larger American ceramics tradition, explains pottery techniques, and summarizes recent changes in pottery making.

Talking with the Turners is augmented by an introduction by Lynn Robertson, director of the McKissick Museum at the University of South Carolina, and a foreword by William R. Ferris, the founding director of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Charles R. Mack has taught art history at the University of South Carolina since 1970, where he is a Louise Scudder Professor of Liberal Arts and the William Joseph Todd Professor of the Italian Renaissance. He is the author of Looking at the Renaissance: Essays toward a Contextual Appreciation; Pienza: The Birth of a Renaissance City; and Paper Pleasures: Five Centuries of Drawings and Watercolors. Mack is also coeditor of Frances Lieber and the Culture of the Mind and Like a Sponge Thrown into Water: Francis Lieber's European Travel Journal of 1844–1845.

REVIEWS

"Talking with the Turners offers fresh insights into an established folk art tradition. Mack's book is distinctive in that he covers a broad geographical range of southern potters, including states and artists neglected in other studies, and his interviews were conducted at the time when the southern pottery craze really took off."—Charles G. Zug II, author of Turners and Burners: The Folk Potters of North Carolina

BOOK FLYER

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ALSO FROM THE AUTHOR

Francis Lieber and the Culture of the Mind
Like a Sponge Thrown into Water: Francis Lieber's European Travel Journal of 1844–1845
The Roman Remains: John Izard Middleton's Visual Souvenirs of 1820-1823, with Addtional Views in Italy, France, and Switzerland
Paper Pleasures: Five Centuries of Drawings and Watercolors

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