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...jen o'connor's...Artful Adventures & Daily Inspirations

I Love Art, Adore the Handmade and Treasure the Vintage. I am the Fun Mom, the Silly Friend and the Writer who wants to make more room for beauty in the everyday.

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Showing posts with label British Ceramic Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British Ceramic Art. Show all posts

Sunday, July 31, 2016

What's ALL THE FUSS??? Made in Devon...come see it in Mahwah on 8/12


    Hope you'll consider coming to see 
    what all the fuss is about...

    I've collected this amazing British Ceramic art since I was 18...so I could not be more thrilled to announce that the NATS (North American Torquay Society) -- my much beloved Collectors' Group is hosting their annual convention here in Warwick and in nearby Mahwah, NJ

    There will be a sale and show of 
    "Torquay Pottery"
    on Saturday, August 13, 2016 from 1-2:30 pm
    a short and sweet showcase of this pottery

    Fellow Collectors and Recognized Dealers in British Ceramic Art to Attend

    Come and see the huge range of patterns and shapes created in Devon c1860-1960...

    Country Living has profiled Torquay Pottery as "What's Hot in Collecting Vintage" and features the pottery at all of the Country Living Fairs via Earth Angels Studios and their NATS CHATS...

    Saturday, 8/13

    1PM - 2:30 THIS EVENT WILL BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

    Presented by the North American Torquay Society (NATS) at the Doubletree Hilton MAHWAH, NJ 

    MORE DETAILS ON THE EVENTS PAGE

    • If you want to read more about Torquay Art Pottery and "NATS" (North American Torquay Society) there is a website...

      Entry to the salesroom is free for all NATS members, a nominal donation of $5 to support the Society will be collected at the door for non-members.
       
      If you want more peeks at the Pottery...look at several other BLOG posts I have done with images of the pottery and the wonderful collecting community...
       
      Thanks and hope to see you there...
      Jen
       
       

    Monday, November 16, 2015

    being green...a peek at some of my collection...Torquay Pottery


     ...from time to time I really love to share a peek at the most beloved among my collections... 
    my Torquay Pottery...
    Now, I am a true "collector"...
    I have so many collections, 
    I joke that I collect collections! 
    That said, I have been dedicated to this masterfully made pottery since I was 18...
    But one humble plate has actually been in my family for 5 generations now!
     
    Here's Rory with his plate and my Mom, Rosie

     Recently I attended the wonderful, annual gathering of the North American Torquay Society (NATS)
    Once a year we collectors gather to share, swap, learn and catch up...I am thrilled that the 2016 Convention will be held right here in 
    Warwick, NY and Mahwah, NJ... 
    stay tuned for details!  There will be a salesroom open to the public on Saturday, August 13th
    Watch the events page of the site for more info..

    Talks are part of the program at the annual conventions...and I wanted to share just a peek at some of the slides from the talk I gave to my fellow NATS members on "Being Green"

    Much of my collection is dedicated to celebrating my favorite color...
    GREEN...

     



    Here's a closer look at some green patterns...


     ...of course I love the Shamrocks...
    being Irish, and all!
     
    I fell in love with florals thanks 
    to friend Shelby Scherr...
    They are like a garden in bloom...I am, of course, partial to those done on a green ground...
    My fave of all is perhaps the Farm Scenes...but those are rare and few... 
    hoping to find more someday...sigh...

    So that's a quick peek...

    For those of you intrigued...
    you can read more about Torquay Pottery 
    and the Society NATS

    It's a great group of folks...and as much as I love the pottery, I am an active member and recently took the post as Vice President because,
     "...it's about the people not the pots", 
    as my dad says... 
    and they are great people!

    AND if you can catch us at 
    The Country Living Fairs...I am hosting NATS CHATS each day at 12:30...
    thanks to Stella Show Management for this opportunity and to Country Living Magazine for acknowledging Torquay Pottery as 
    "What's Hot in Collecting Vintage"

    happy collecting
    xo Jen

    Monday, October 19, 2015

    ...a madness for minis...Torquay Pottery

     ...this blog post is adapted from a piece I just prepared for "The Collector" ...the members' magazine of the North American Torquay Society.  
     
    I am hoping by sharing it here on this blog, I may generate more interest in the Society and our beloved Torquay Pottery... 


    Anything that can be held in the palm of the hand has a certain playful, toy-like charm. My madness for small things and minis began a long time ago. 

    I was the little girl that lovingly decorated the dollhouse made for me by my Dad (Jim Graney fellow Torquay lover and NATS member), dreaming that one day, I would have my own home to decorate. I loved tiny things…and still do.
     
    Look above at the image of a display within a display filling a tiny doll house sized hutch within another hutch…these are all less than 1” in height. 
    (Look at the large dresser tray peeking out from behind the display for scale)

    But most of my minis are the size of these below....


    none of these items is more than 2.5" tall...

     The mottos on the minis are those short and sweet adages that speak with such common observation. With little space on the surface to decorate, the quips and mottoes are direct and often the ones cited most within our vernacular.



    Here are a few on a shelf that Sue Parker gave me...

     and some more in a tiny cupboard...I love that I can fit them in here and there!

    Conversely, I love the HUGE grand LARGE pieces of my collection, but as the shelves fill — even as I move and play and re-do arrangements in cabinets — I can never say there is not room for one more mini. Indeed I have had a tough time passing up any I have had the chance to buy. They are a wonderful, tuck-in size and I love them for being small, affordable and utterly adorable!

    What’s also fun is that they get me to look at patterns and shapes I would not otherwise pursue.  You can see among these photos a variety of patterns not elsewhere in my collection…the cockerels, cottages and even tiny toby jugs and the only commemorative pieces I have in my collection.

    As a toy collector as well, they seem to blend in well with my other displays.  The tea sets make great companions to Jody Battaglia's folk art monkeys sitting in a child’s hutch in the guest room.

    And I owe a big thanks to my great gal pals, Kathy Nuttall and Kathy Collins, for the find of my new wall hanging “mini shelf”. 


    We found it in a booth at Brimfield and it wasn’t until I got it home that I realized how perfect it was to host them all. I am grateful that they encouraged me to buy it and lug it through the fields back to the truck.

     Well worth it! I had had the minis among some different cabinets before, 
    and now have my faves in one place... 

    You can learn more about Torquay Pottery at the upcoming NATS CHATS at the Country Living Fair... see the BLOG post of 10/9 for full details...

    ...xxoo Jen...


    Monday, August 4, 2014

    hello Monday...hello 5 generations

    Hello Monday...

    It's time to take a peek at the week ahead 
    and all I can do is think sentimental thoughts.  
    Maybe it's the long summer days...
    maybe its the time I share between my kids and my folks..

    But hello Monday...I am just in that type of mood.
    This is my son Rory and my Mom, Rosie...Rory is the 5th generation of our family to hold this humble pottery plate....

    So hello to a good story...and here we go...
    note: I recently shared this story with my fellow members of NATS 
    (The North American Torquay -- said Tor-Key BTW --- Society)....you heard more about them a few weeks ago HERE on another Hello Monday post...


    When I was a little girl, young enough to still be taking naps in the afternoon, I would lie on my parents’ couch and look up at a shelf full of knick-knacks. I knew the most treasured object among them – despite its shabbiness -- was the old cracked plate. I loved the dull shine it had...of course I didn’t know what glaze or slip or sgrafitto was at time, and I could not yet read, but I knew the plate was very old and very dear to my Mom, Rosie. 

    She loved it because it had been her grandmother’s – a woman who had been born in about 1850 and died before my Mom was born. This plate was her only link, the only thing she had to connect her to her father’s mother, a woman she had heard so many wonderful stories about. 

    She displayed the plate on the shelf, moving it from apartment to apartment and house to house never knowing anything about it... guessing with its motto that it was a gift to her grandmother, or that she herself had purchased it since the words were meaningful to her.

    Even as a little girl I had a reverence for the generations that came before me; I was aware that a simple object could connect us to each other.  So, despite being worn and showing age, old things enchanted me with their years.

    Fast forward to Rosie’s glorious yard sale-ing adventures during my high school years! At a one in Queens, NYC she stumbled across a wee creamer with a cottage on it and she thought it was just cute. Snatching it up, she enjoyed it and soon found a few other pieces around in her many antiques and junking jaunts – cottages and a few scandy pieces, realizing that the leafy pattern was similar and had similar markings. She quite accidentally, had begun collecting Torquay pottery -- made in Devon, England.

    Then, in 1987 we I was in England with my folks, I spotted a blue cachepot in the window of an antiques shop. The store was closed, but staying in the area, we went back the next day to investigate as I thought it was so pretty. 
    Turning the pot over, we read “ROYAL TORQUAY POTTERY ENGLAND”.

    When I read the motto, I was smitten with Torquay pottery forever…
    it was literally speaking to me…
    It reads:

    Life is mostly froth and bubbles
    Two things stand like stone
    Kindness in another’s troubles
    Courage in your own.


    Can you see how I loved it as a teen making life decisions and choices and heading off to college soon? Understanding that it resonated with me, my parents bought it for me as my birthday gift – I turned 18 on that trip. I treasure it…and the memories of discovering it and falling in love with it.   

    From then on I hunted up the pottery as I could, discovering so many wonderful patterns from shamrocks to scrolls...Persian and Kerswell Daisy...sigh...
    I collected as I could on limited funds and with 
    such limited access to it pre-internet.
     
    The irony in all this…all that time…during our growing affection for and collection of Torquay pottery, that plate I stared at all those long afternoons when I was supposed to be napping -- my Great Grandmother's plate was Torquay pottery!

    Going deeper into collecting -- and being obsessed with handmade things and how they are made -- it was the history of the potters and potteries that made the pieces truly beloved to me. Studying fine art and metropolitan studies and design I was drawn – and still am – to the pottery that came from this region --  in particular what was made before WWII....
     
    Through graduate school in Urban Planning and my early professional career I specialized in regional economic development, working to make communities better, more viable by cultivating local resources and thus more livable through job creation and local industry. I knew then that the development of the potteries in Devon was synonymous to my own work and felt closer to the history of the potteries and the handmade creations that emerged from them.

     I often muse that Torquay has always been a part of my life. 
    It connected me to my family’s past, it brought me joy in its own beauty and fine workmanship, and it’s clearly provided endless inspiration for me in my career and work.
     
    So hello Mom....I am ever grateful to you and so glad I inherited your  appreciation for old things. 

    Hello to making life more interesting and meaningful through collecting and the wonderful folks we meet along the way.

    Hello cabinets filled with pottery and thinking about the hands that turned and painted these things so many years ago...

     Hello to sharing a story...every handmade object has one of who made it and where it came from...

    Hello to loving old things...worn and aged...they can still be dear...

    Hello to all of you...
    xxoo Jen

    Monday, June 9, 2014

    Hello Monday and hello Torquay and Friends and Pots and more...

    Hello Monday, my name is Jen and I am a collector. 

    Through and through, since I was a little girl I have loved pretty, hand made things and many a love affair, adventure and pursuit have come my way with my special treasures and things.

    You really are a collector, or not. You are born that way...

    Among my oldest and most treasured collections is Torquay (said Tor-key) Pottery....as ceramic folk art, it has had my heart for many, many years, and the story of how the potteries were started in Devon as rural economic redevelopment effort during the industrial revolution speaks to my interests as an urban planner...
    I got my first piece when I was 17 on a trip to England with my parents...

    It was this lovely lustrous pot with a deep blue glaze and had -- 
    in a folksy, sgraffito writing this quote:

    "Life is mostly froth and bubbles,
    Two things stand like stone.
    Kindness in another's troubles,
    courage in your own."

    Can you see how this spoke to me as a teen...
    well, I fell in love and then as I learned more about this type of pottery 
    and how and where it was made, I fell deeper...I needed to know more, needed to learn about the various patterns and potteries....

    Without getting to much into that now (we'll save some for a later date), I am just happy to share how an appreciation for British Ceramic Art has brought these wonderful folks into my world.

     I had a wonderful visit from Kathy Collins and Brenda & Ian Kimber...
    what a great morning we had...

    Hello friends!

    The North American Torquay Society (NATS) is the US enthusiasts club and organization....the folks are great fun and I am hoping to steal away to TN in late September to join them for their annual convention, but we'll have to see what time allows....

    You can visit the NATS site for more info on domestic events and such...

    The British Society -- of which I am also a member is TPCS...their site has a wealth of info on the history of the potteries...

    I will be blogging more about the history of this fabulous ceramic art...I have a photo shoot scheduled at Kathy's house for this week and I am hoping to share more image of her collections here and via some of the mags you read.

    I adore and respect these lovely ladies and
     I am grateful to know them and share a passion...
     

    Hello Monday and HELLO Shelby and Charlotte!!!

    Hello to friends near and far, it's wonderful to find something in common with folks out there...

    Hello to getting on the road, heading to Boston soon.

    Hello dusting, ummm you see this cabinet, yeah, well it needs it!

    Hello to the summer, it's looming large and the list of summer projects is looming larger!!!

    Hello to my dear friend Anne....this wonderful Aussie is coming in soon...she loves Warwick! 

    xxoo and hello Monday and a good week to you all

    Jen

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