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Across the Pacific: Eastern Inspiration in Gilded Age Craft

Lora Jean Kilroy Center, MFAH 6003 Memorial Drive, Houston, TX

Benjamin Miller will share how the latter part of the 19th century saw a furious exchange of commerce and aesthetics between America and Asia. Nowhere was this more influential than in the decorative arts, where visual vocabulary and technical abilities rapidly proliferated between continents. In America, craftspeople wasted no time incorporating these fresh ideas into their practice, leading to an explosion of creativity and innovation.

A World of Vivid Brilliancy: Understanding Chinese Export Ceramics through Visual Records

Lora Jean Kilroy Center, MFAH 6003 Memorial Drive, Houston, TX

William R. Sargent will discuss how Western attitudes towards Chinese ceramics can be discerned through their representation in visual art, from their first appearance in Europe to modern times. Paintings and prints are a rich resource of information, helping to identify markets for Chinese ceramics, their uses, and lending credence to dating. They are a record of the past that cannot be recreated by shipping documents, estate inventories, auction records, journals, or diaries. Using these visual records, which reflect changes of taste, interior design, display, and collecting habits, we can trace the impact of Chinese export ceramics on Western culture.

Stalking the History of Latin American Ceramics

Lora Jean Kilroy Center, MFAH 6003 Memorial Drive, Houston, TX

Marion Oettinger Jr. will give a concise overview of Latin American ceramic through time and space, from pre-Columbian times to the modern era, concentrating on form as well a function.

Field Trip to view Private Ceramic Collection

Lora Jean Kilroy Center, MFAH 6003 Memorial Drive, Houston, TX

A bus has been arranged to take people to the Delores Martin's home. Use Sign up Genius to reserve a place on the bus. Cost $20. https://www.signupgenius.com/go/70A0A4DACAF2BA7F94-48308842-ihcc
Car Pools are also being arranged. Contact Andy Fossler with questions. [email protected]

Thomas W. Commeraw: Forgotten Free Black Potter of Federal New York

Lora Jean Kilroy Center, MFAH 6003 Memorial Drive, Houston, TX

A. Brandt Zipp will introduce Thomas W. Commeraw, one of the most well-known African-American craftsmen of his day. A stoneware potter working in the earliest decades of the new United States, he and his fellow New York City stoneware manufacturers were looked to as the gold standard of their craft, shipping large amounts of ware up and down the eastern seaboard.
Thomas W. Commeraw was completely forgotten by American society in the wake of his death. This presentation will tell Commeraw’s fascinating story from the perspective of the person who serendipitously rediscovered him in the twenty-first century and then brought his story back to life.

Celebrating the Matriarchs: Pottery by American Indian Women

Junior League of Houston 1811 Briar Oaks Lane, Houston, TX

Colleen Gold will discuss the tradition of pottery making in American Pueblo Indian life which is one of their most enduring traditions. What was once considered Folk Art by many has become recognized as Fine Art today and is avidly collected by many. Ima Hogg was an early collector, and her pieces are in the collection at MFAH. Traditionally made primarily by women in matriarchal societies spread across New Mexico and Arizona, these objects reflect both their personal innovations and a solid grounding in a 2,000-year-old tradition which influences the composition, form, and decoration of the pots to this day.

“Ceramic Art of the American Southwest in the MFAH Collection”

Lora Jean Kilroy Center, MFAH 6003 Memorial Drive, Houston, TX

Presented by Chelsea Dacus,
Assistant Curator of the Arts of the Indigenous Americas, Africa, the Pacific, and Antiquities, and Assistant Curator of Ancient Art

Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

“Dining at the White House: American Presidential China in the McNeil Americana Collection at the Philadelphia Museum of Art”

Lora Jean Kilroy Center, MFAH 6003 Memorial Drive, Houston, TX

Presented by David Barquist, H. Richard Dietrich Jr. Curator of American Decorative Arts
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA
Dr. David Barquist, world renowned expert, will chronicle the history of porcelain table wares owned and used by American presidents and their families for public and private dining. As part of the most highly visible household in the nation, the presidential china in the McNeil Americana Collection offers an overview of the changing styles, tastes, and modes of entertaining across four centuries of American history, from George Washington to Ronald Reagan. The lecture will also look at the changes over time in the ceramics available to fashion-conscious Americans, from goods imported from China and Europe to domestically-made products.