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News & Announcements

New Exhibit at Folk Pottery Museum

A new exhibit, open since Sept. 1, 2007 in our changing gallery, focuses on North Carolina pottery and its relationship to our own northeast Georgia folk pottery and museum collection.

 

This wide ranging and colorful exhibit includes pieces from a surprising variety of folk traditions including Native American earthenware, Moravian lead glazed earthenware, salt glazed stoneware from the eastern piedmont, and alkaline glazed stoneware from the Catawba valley.

 

The new exhibit features several pieces by the late Burlon Craig who, like Georgia’s Lanier Meaders, was a living link back to the utilitarian pottery production so necessary to survival among the small farmers of the south. As we learned through the previous Edgefield pottery exhibit, the North Carolina potters moved where clay deposits and markets took them. Not surprisingly several early Mossy Creek families including the Cravens can trace their turning and burning ancestors back to the “Old North State.”

 

Curator Dr. John Burrison developed the exhibit drawing from his personal collection of North Carolina pottery. The design and production work is once again the artistry of Folk Pottery Museum exhibit designer Dale Brubaker. SNCA members are encouraged to stop by the Center to experience the new exhibit and then spread the word to friends and family!


Folk Potters Trail to Receive National Press

The SNCA staff developed the Folk Potters Trail brochure to coincide with the opening of the Folk Pottery Museum in September, and connect visitors with the living tradition of northeast Georgia ceramics. A charitable effort by the museum and SNCA, the brochure leads hundreds of interested collectors to the shops of folk potters. We recently learned that the Folk Potters Trail will be featured in National Geographic Traveler Magazine sometime this fall. The magazine is featuring a geotourism mapguide to Appalachia featuring two driving trails from each of 13 states. Georgia’s contributions will be the Chieftains Trail in the northwest and our own Folk Potters Trail in northeast Georgia. The trail brochure is available on the museum website and links to the site will be published in National Geographic Traveler. Special counting software is already in place to allow SNCA to track the impact of this national exposure.


In the News

The Times, Gainesville, September 3, 2006
NORTHEAST GEORGIA FOLK POTTERY, NEW MUSEUM IN SAUTEE CELEBRATES MASTERS OF CLAY

The Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia opened Saturday, inviting guests to discover the history of folk pottery in our region and how it moved from the kitchen cabinets of the 1800s to the collectors' display cases of present day.    Read more ...

AccessNorthGa.com, August 29, 2006
FOLK POTTERY MUSEUM OPENS AT THE SAUTEE NACOOCHEE CENTER

Let me tell you, one of the delightful things happening in our area right now is a serious preserving and displaying of our unique history ... and in that light the history of Northeast Georgia has another crown jewel. Come noontime this Saturday, September 2, the new Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia will hold its official opening , and may I suggest you go see it. It is something special ... a standing tribute to a family oriented business that started as a necessary product in every mountain home, and now has become a distinctive and collected art form.    Read more ...

AccessNorthGa.com, August 28, 2006
NATION'S ONLY MUSEUM DEDICATED EXCLUSIVELY TO FOLK POTTERY OPENS SATURDAY

SAUTEE-NACHOOCHEE - The Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia opens its doors Saturday in White County, the country's first and only museum dedicated exclusively to folk pottery.    Read more ...


Press Releases

BROOKS JOINS FOLK POTTERY MUSEUM OF NORTHEAST GEORGIA AS DIRECTOR

The Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia on the campus of the Sautee Nacoochee Center welcomes Chris Brooks as its first Director. Chris, a native of Atlanta, was raised in Stone Mountain and attended Young Harris College in north Georgia. A veteran of the United States Navy, Chris served six years in the submarine service and returned home in 1985 to enroll at the University of Georgia to complete his degree in history. His studies with noted historian Dr. Phinizy Spalding sparked a lifelong interest in Georgia history and rural heritage. Chris also holds a Masters degree in Historical Archaeology from The College of William and Mary.    Read more ...

FOLK POTTERY MUSEUM OF NORTHEAST GEORGIA GRAND OPENING IN SEPTEMBER
On September 2nd, the long awaited Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia will open its doors. More than five years in the making, the Museum will be a showcase for the rich folk pottery tradition of our region.    Read more ...

POTTERY TELLS THE STORY OF MOUNTAIN HERITAGE AND FOLK TRADITIONS OF SOUTHERN APPALACHIA
When the doors of the Northeast Georgia Folk Pottery Museum open in September, 2006, visitors will be invited to absorb the spirit of Georgia’s Appalachian people through the display and illumination of nearly 200 years of pottery making.    Read more ...




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