-40%
J B OWENS EMBOSSED LOTUS 6 1/4" BAND GRAPES MARKED OWENS LOTUS X218 VASE c1906
$ 97.68
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
J. B. Owens PotteryLOTUS 6 1/4"
INCISED W/BAND
OF
GRAPES - MARKED
OWENS LOTUS
X218 VASE,
Circa 1906
Cincinnati
is proud to offer a
J. B. Owens Pottery
EMBOSSED
LOTUS
6 1/4"
INCISED W/Band of
Grapes
Marked OWENS LOTUS X218 VASE
.
Circa 1906
*********
Offered with
NO
BIDDER PREMIUMS.
Lay-A-Ways
AVAILABLE up to FOUR MONTHS
!
Double
boxed shipping
with Care
!
The EMBOSSED LOTUS
vase, introduced in 1906,
is a very desirable piece of art pottery. Shown on page 47 of Frank Hahn's
COLLECTOR'S GUIDE TO OWENS POTTERY
, as item #37 and the 1996 value was shown as 0. This old J B Owens vase is in wonderful condition with outstanding colours in the decoration and with a high degree of SHARP mold detail.
The vase
is an outstanding example of a designed J B Owens EMBOSSED LOTUS vase made Zanesville, Ohio back in the 1906. The vase stands
6 1/4" tall by 5 1/4" wide
at the widest point in the shape center. The line is shown in Frank Hahn's and McKibben/Soffit's books on J. B. Owens Pottery. The vase has NO hairlines, NO cracks, NO fleabites and in wonderful original condition. Please see the above pictures to view this vase and the
base mark of "OWENS LOTUS X218". Please plan to add .95 for double box shipping in the USA.
OUR GUARANTEE - All items purchased come with our complete satisfaction guarantee. If you are unhappy with your purchase for any reason, just contact us within 3 calendar days of receiving the item. In order to receive a refund, the item must be returned in the SAME condition it was received. Returned items must be received by us within 3 days of the original receipt of purchase.
In the unlikely event damage or repair was missed on an item, all shipping charges will be included in your refund. Shipping charges are not refundable on pieces returned for crazing and other minor factory flaws such as surface scratches, glaze skips, grinding marks, kiln flaws, and stilt pulls. If any such factory conditions exist, and in our opinion are objectionable, they will be noted in the item description.
The J. B.Owens’ company entered the art pottery field in 1896. His first product was the “Utopian” ware which was similar to Weller’s “Louwelsa, Rookwood’s” standard brown ware, and George Young’s brown “Rozane” ware. During the decade he made art pottery, many of the now famous names in the American art pottery history were at some point associated with Owens Pottery. These names include W. A. Long, Frank Ferrell, Karl Langenbeck, John J. Herold, Herb Hugo, Albert Radford, and John Lessell and Guido Howorth from Austria-Hungary. Frank Ferrel came to Owens Pottery about 1907, and then later became designer for Roseville Pottery. These men were but few of the experts that were employed by the Owens factory. It is believed that between 1896 and 1907, Owens Pottery produced over 48 distinct art pottery lines and created more new lines during this period than any of the firm's competitors.
Most Owens Pottery was marked. Often marings included a shape number. Several different marks were used and much of the art pottery was signed by the artist. In addition the names of the various lines were often found impressed with or without the Owens Pottery mark. The Owensart mark was adopted in 1906. Sometimes trial pieces bear process marks whose meanings are largely unknown today. Because of the movement of individual designers and decorators among the various Zanesville art potteries and their offshoots, it is almost impossible to attribute unmarked artware to a specific manufacturer. It should be noted that there are a number unique shapes which can be identified as Owens Pottery even though unmarked.
In 1904 the Owens Pottery Co. issued a forty-page catalog, said to be the largest ever issued by an American pottery. It was 14x20 inches and contained eight hundred items. He duplicated every line made by his competitors and also created new ones. Some of these lines were expensive to make; and others so nearly copied products of other potteries, it was hard to market them. Outlets for Owens’ pottery were established in New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia. Large shipments were also sent to foreign countries, as far as Australia, the West Indies, and Brazil. Owens stopped making art pottery about 1907 or 1908 and turned to the manufacturing of commercial tile. During his years in the art-pottery business he had won four gold medals and a grand prize (at the Lewis and Clark Exposition in Portland, Oregon, in 1905). He managed to get along quite well until his factory burned in 1928. According to Owens, only East Liverpool, Ohio, and Trenton, New Jersey, outranked Zanesville as pottery centers in the country. Against the advice of several businessmen, he rebuilt the factory at the beginning of the 1929 depression resulting in the loss of all his properties. He moved to Homestead, Florida where he remained until his death in 1934.
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Offered with
NO
BIDDER PREMIUMS.
Lay-A-Ways
AVAILABLE
!
Double
boxed shipping
with Care
!
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