Posted 6 years ago
artfoot
(367 items)
Evans Pottery in Dexter, Missouri was a traditional Ozark pottery that traces its roots to the mid-1800s supplying utilitarian ware to mostly local customers. This is where the family members who became Desert Sands Pottery learned the trade. The interiors of vessels made by Evans were coated with a dark brown Albany slip - the Missouri Evans never used a clear glaze, inside or outside, on their products. The clear glaze was an Evans Desert Sands refinement but their earliest products only used the glaze on the interiors of vessels. It was the urging of the younger Ferrell Evans that convinced his traditionalist uncle Arthur to glaze the exteriors as well. The commercial success of the new look all but phased out unglazed ware. By the early 1960s, unglazed pieces were seldom produced.
The cylinders in the first picture stand 12" and 12 1/4" respectively with 3 1/2" diameters flaring to 4" at tops and bases. The small cylinder stands 4" tall with a diameter of 1 3/4". The vase in the middle stands 10" tall and features some unusual (for Desert Sands) tooling. Vases over 8" tall are rather scarce. The second picture shows a similar shape in various sizes. The tallest is 8"; the smallest just 2 1/2" tall.
Very nice post Harry, I love Desert Sands, and Niloak, so this unglazed Desert Sands is the best of both worlds! :^D Thanks for posting! :^)
they look so great as a group!
Amazing pottery, such incredible colours. I really like the tones of the tooled vase.
This is a link to a post of a piece by Byron Seeley that I have, that is made the same way as the Desert Sands, but then he carves into it, to bring out the interior design of the clay:
https://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/225118-red-canyon-ware-vase-cup-by-byron-seeley
There are 2 links for YouTube videos showing how it's made, and another link for a mosaic pottery vase like one that I have, made with many tiny pieces of different colors of clay, to create an intricate, not freeform design, all interesting to see! I can't remember the artist's name Gambino I think, but it's on there! :^D Thanks again for posting this Harry! :^)
The Mosaic Pottery Vase that I was talking about was by Jean Gerbino Vallauris! :^)