Art Pottery- Rumrill.pub - Red Wing Collectors Society
Transcription
Art Pottery- Rumrill.pub - Red Wing Collectors Society
Rumrill made art pottery under many names By Ray Reiss Published in the Red Wing Republican Eagle on 14 June 2007 Ray Reiss is the author of Red Wing Art Pottery: Including Pottery Made For RumRill, Red Wing Art Pottery Two and Red Wing Dinnerware Price & Identification Guide. Ray has been a commercial photographer nearly all his life, and he recently opened a Bed & Breakfast in Chicago’s Bucktown neighborhood. I started collecting Red Wing art pottery in the mid-70s while living in Baraboo, Wisconsin. The variety of interesting shapes, designs and glazes initially caught my eye; the undervalued prices sealed the deal. In particular, the pottery marked RumRill that looked just like Red Wing sparked my interest. During the Great Depression, Red Wind Union Stoneware began losing money for the first time in its history. Primarily a stoneware company that sold utilitarian crocks and jugs, the company began to include colorfully glazed artware with their merchandise— mainly flower vases, figurines and bowls. They changed their name to Red Wing Potteries in 1936. Neo-Classic Group: front left, #672-–3” x 10” bowl in Seafoam-Ivory, Nile Green Lined ($300); #673-3 1/4” candleholder in Nile Green ($40-60); rear left, #663-8 1/4” vase in Nile Green ($250); and #664-9 1/8” vase in Eggshell—Ivory, SemiMatt ($250) In August of 1932, Red Wing entered into a marketing arrangement with George Rumrill, a pottery salesman from Little Rock, Arkansas who sold Camark and Niloak Pottery. At one time it was thought that Rumrill was a designer, but research shows that he was always a salesman. His designs came from other companies or from hiring designers such as Louise Bauer, who worked at Shawnee Pottery and later went on to be the head designer at Hull Pottery. Rumrill originally tried to get his pottery made at Shawnee Pottery, but only one known piece was made there, according to a plant manager. It was a RumRill display sign depicting a potter at a wheel with the word RumRill on it. It is rumored that Rumrill and the Shawnee management had a bitter argument and he went elsewhere to get his pottery line made as a result. Red Wing made RumRill Pottery exclusively from August of 1932 until December of 1937, when Red Wing hired the majority of George Rumrill’s sales staff and started marking the pieces with the Red Wing name. During this 1932-7 period Red Wing would produce the same pottery without the RumRill name on the bottom (only the shape number) and would put a Red Wing sticker on it. Red Wing also continued to make stoneware, gardenware, and starting in 1935, dinnerware. George Djalma Rumrill After parting ways with Red Wing, Rumrill was made by Florence Pottery in Mount Gilead, Ohio. This factory, managed by Lawton Gondor (who later founded Gondor Pottery) had been in and out of operation since the late 1800s, manufacturing flowerpots and tiles. Starting in December 1938, RumRill Pottery was made there exclusively for the next three years. On October 16, 1941 a fire destroyed Florence Pottery. An interesting tale is told about the fire and the events leading up to it. Even though the pottery was not selling well, the foreman was ordered to continue manufacturing the pottery, filling up the warehouse until it was overflowing. A fire broke out in the warehouse, ironically not in the kiln where pottery factory fires usually ignite. When the fireman arrived they sat within three feet of a cistern that for some reason was not used. Many of the townspeople were seen carrying pottery out of the burning building, including the Fire Chief, who held out his long coat while his wife loaded him up with pottery. On his second trip out of the factory, the Fire Chief died of a heart attack. The next morning the paper carried the headline “Fire Chief Dies Fighting Fire”. When Gondor opened up his own factory in Zanesville, Ohio in December of 1941 it produced RumRill for around one year until Gondor started manufacturing pottery under his own name; however, it is likely that very little RumRill pottery was manufactured there due to the Second World War. From the Athenian Group in Suntan-Green Lined. The base is #572 and the separate bowl is #573 ($1600). Together they are 11” tall. This base was also offered with a shallow bowl (#574). For collectors, RumRill pottery is pretty separated into two categories, Red Wing and post-Red Wing. Post-Red Wing is actually Florence Pottery, and a few pieces that were manufactured at Gondor Pottery. Red Wing RumRill always has three digits for the shape number on the bottom (with the exception of #50, #52, #53 & #54), while Florence RumRill almost always has a letter and digits. The glazes were distinct for each company, and easily identify the manufacturer even if the shape number on the bottom is unreadable. The few pieces that were made at Gondor Factory are identified by their matching characteristics to pieces marked Gondor Pottery. Prices for Red Wing RumRill pieces vary from around $30 dollars for some of the common simple pieces to over $3000 for a Dark Blue #249 nude handled vase. #674-15” From the Neo-Classic Group. This vase in Gypsy Orange was the tallest in that group ($800) #570-10” in Suntan–Seal Brown Lined from the Athenian Group ($900).