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Who Was the Mysterious WEG of WEG Pottery?

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    Posted 12 years ago

    katinka-ka…
    (1 item)

    Link to flickr set of entire WEG pottery collection: http://www.flickr.com/photos/81337094@N00/sets/72157633182453632/.

    I bought my the first martini sort of pitcher of this WEG pottery about 2000 at a local New Jersey consignment store. After that, I just found it different places: ebay, antique stores, yard sales, that sort of thing.

    One seller told me he and his wife had bought their WEG pottery thing in Greenwich Village while on their honeymoon sometime in the 1950s, but couldn't remember more than that.

    An antique dealer who was selling a large set (which I didn't buy) confirmed that story that there was a guy who made this in Greenwich Village and it was hard to tell if she knew what she was talking about or was just trying to get me to buy it.

    I took some of it to Antiques Roadshow, and they were not impressed.

    At one point this site (<a href="http://www.modern50.com/objectsart/frederic-weinberg-pottery/" rel="nofollow">www.modern50.com/objectsart/frederic-weinberg-pottery/</a>) attributed it to Frederic Weinberg (see his name in url). Currently they are selling some but don't seem to name who made it.

    At some other point, over the last 10 years, someone on ebay said this was made by William Elmer Gross or someone named William Gross and his partner Elmer. I have no idea where this story is from, and I have never been able to get a seller to confirm that, they all seem to grab it from previous descriptions.

    Some current ebay descriptions say "it was made in the Front Street New York Studio Pottery of Elmer Gross and his partner William," "William Elmer Gross
    Mid century pottery" "CREATED FROM THE FRONT STREET NEW YORK STUDIO ART POTTERY WORKSHOP OF
    ELMER GROSS AND HIS PARTNER WILLIAM - MARKED WEG"....

    Can anyone tell me who made this? Did William exist? Why would Elmer be the second initial and not also have a last name initial?

    What's the story with this?

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

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    Comments

    1. katinka-katinka, 12 years ago
      I meant to post this in mystery section, and I'm not sure if I did, but I also posted it elsewhere, and two super helpful people gave me pointers to obits that led to more info.

      There was a gallery in NYC called WEG gallery, which I'm guessing was named after the owners, William Forauer, who died in 1998 at age 74, just a year after Elmer Gross, who died in late 1996 at age 89.

      William Forauer's obit mentioned that Elmer and William were life companions, and also said William had endless good humor, an open smile and gentle enthusiasm and all of those things made people like visiting their gallery.

      Elmer's obit did not mention those things, but he was originally from Wilkes-Barre before he ended up in NYC running a retail ceramic business.

      Anyhow, those two articles helped me find a 1952 nyt story about some new collections on view at the Willow, 184 West Fourth Street:

      "A gray glaze marked with faint black lines consitutes the background for the delicate motifs that decorate the objects in the Weg ceramic group made by Elmer Gross and William Forauer. This collection includes a cylindrical martini mixer and a rounded water pitcher, the latter with a large handle in a semi-hoop shape. Both of these having matching rounded cups."

      Then someone mentioned that later, I might be interested in seeing what is up with the NY public library, who has a grant for this: NYC Chronology of Place, a Linked Open Data Gazetteer, and they were totally right! I am interested in that! I still want to find their gallery and stuff, but it was a total relief to know who finally made this and that they had names and a sense of humor.

    2. katinka-katinka, 12 years ago
      Thanks, Bellin68! I love it too!
    3. geosits7, 2 years ago
      I have two cups by this very same artist. I wonder how much they are worth.
    4. kwqd kwqd, 2 years ago
      https://www.valuemystuff.com/us/appraisal
    5. easpbi, 2 years ago
      I have one small container signed WEG 10. It has a small chip on the top but it's still wonderful. My mother always kept pencils in it.
    6. easpbi, 2 years ago
      I've just realized the little container my mother kept pencils in was part of a set with an ashtray that was broken ...so the little container was made to hold a pack of regular cigarettes. LOL.
    7. PinkAmy, 11 days ago
      Elmer Gerald Gross was my great uncle, my great grandmother Rose’s youngest brother. William Forauer was his life partner of nearly half a century. I met Uncle Elmer a few times, at least once near Wilkes-Barre for Rose’s 85 of 90th birthday and at least once in NYC. Rose was the eldest of 11, 9 surviving children and Elmer was the youngest, born 23 years later. At one point Rose and her son, my maternal grandfather Melvin, who was older than Elmer, returned to her family home to raise Melvin, who grew up with the three youngest Gross children. I remember always knowing Elmer was gay, because some in the family told me, so he wasn’t closeted. William was never invited to Rose’s birthdays. I think, but am not positive, that I met William in NYC and I believe I also visited the gallery/shop.
      Though WEG was mostly pottery, I have a painting done by one of the partners. I do genealogy and my tree is on ancestry.

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