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The National Ceramic Museum and Heritage Center
is located between the villages of Roseville and Crooksville on Ohio State Route 93. Known for some of the best art pottery ever produced, the region is sometimes referred to as "pottery country" or the "clay belt." The term "Roseville Pottery" is used to describe much of the pottery produced in the area.
The Museum is open year-round but with fewer hours during the winter and early spring months of November through April. At the Museum, visitors can get directions, maps and flyers to all of the regional pottery establishments. There are exhibits of both "the old and the new" pottery housed in five buildings grouped around courtyard gardens and an outdoor kiln.
The popularity of pottery collecting and the aesthetic appeal of pottery are celebrated every July during The Crooksville-Roseville Pottery Festival. The Festival dates are July 8-13, 2008; many traditional activities and thousands of visiting pottery collectors are eagerly anticipated. Several of the organized collector groups schedule meetings, exhibits and sales in the region at about the same time. The Museum is the best place to gather information, to start exploring the regional pottery heritage, and to begin collecting your favorite pottery pieces.
HISTORY
The National Ceramic Museum and Heritage Center
A Brief History of the Pottery Heritage of Our Region
The people of the Woodland Indian cultures (from 800 B.C.E.) were the first people in South East Ohio to make pottery for storing and cooking food. Known to archeologists as the Adena, Hopewell and Late Woodland cultures, each group developed its own distinct pot shapes and decorations. European settlers later colonized the area and established small backyard potteries, known as Bluebird Potteries.â The potteries operated out of small sheds and thus their openings were an annual spring event, just like the return of the bluebirds. With the onset of the industrial revolution, pottery manufacture became mechanized. Mass production of slip cast wares became common. The Art Pottery movement (1880-1940's) began as a response to the standardization of mass production. Many fine, collectible, individually made Art Pottery pieces were created until about 1950 when the industry again returned to production of large volume commercial pottery. The collection of the National Ceramic Museum and Heritage Center contains many fine examples of Art Pottery and other pieces that date from the 1880's to the present. Today, the region is still home to many excellent pottery manufacturers, producing high quality wares for discriminating buyers. Many fine artists, ceramic sculptors and potters also choose to live in the area and create their art works. The region is known as a global center for the production of pottery and ceramic arts.
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