High Museum of Art presents landmark exhibition of work by 19th century Black potters from the American south
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High Museum of Art presents landmark exhibition of work by 19th century Black potters from the American south
Maker(s) once known, likely enslaved at Phoenix Stone Ware Factory (ca. 1840), and attributed to Thomas M. Chandler, Jr. (American, 1810–1854), Watercooler (detail), ca. 1840, alkaline-glazed stoneware with iron and kaolin slip, High Museum of Art, Atlanta, purchase in honor of Audrey Shilt, President of the Members Guild, 1996–1997, with funds from the Decorative Arts Acquisition Endowment and Decorative Arts Acquisition Trust, 1996.132. Photo by Michael McKelvey.



ATLANTA, GA.- The High Museum of Art is the exclusive Southeast venue for “Hear Me Now: The Black Potters of Old Edgefield, South Carolina” (Feb. 16-May 12, 2024), a critically acclaimed exhibition featuring nearly 60 ceramic objects created by enslaved African Americans in Edgefield, South Carolina, in the decades before the Civil War. Considered through the lens of current scholarship in the fields of history, literature, anthropology, material culture, diaspora and African American studies, these 19th-century vessels testify to the lived experiences, artistic agency and material knowledge of those who created them.

The works include monumental storage jars by the literate potter and poet Dave (later recorded as David Drake, ca. 1800-1870) and rare examples of utilitarian wares and face vessels by unrecorded makers, including a ca. 1840 water cooler jug from the High’s collection. “Hear Me Now” also includes work by leading contemporary Black artists who have responded to or whose practice connects with the Edgefield story, including Theaster Gates, Simone Leigh and Woody De Othello. The exhibition is organized by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

“We are honored to present this exhibition, which recognizes the innovation of Edgefield potters—a practice all the more remarkable given that their work was created under the most inhumane conditions of enslavement,” said Rand Suffolk, director of the High. “It’s an important story, one that not only dovetails with the High’s longstanding recognition and display of Edgefield pottery but one that should also resonate with our regional audiences.”

In the early 1800s, white settlers established potteries in the Old Edgefield district, a rural area on the western edge of South Carolina, to take advantage of its natural clays. Hundreds of enslaved adults and children were forced to work in the potteries, bearing all responsibility for the labor-intensive craft, from mining and preparing clay to throwing vast quantities of wares and decorating and glazing the vessels. By the 1840s, they were producing tens of thousands of vessels each year. The stoneware they made, of varying sizes and forms and essential for food preparation and storage, supported the region’s expanding population and was inextricably linked to the lucrative plantation economy. The history of slavery is widely understood in terms of agriculture, but these wares tell the story of what historians call “industrial slavery,” where the knowledge, experience and skill of enslaved people were essential to the success of the enterprise.

White enslavers and factory owners often marked the wares with their names, therefore claiming the expertise of the enslaved as their own. Only some of the enslaved makers have been identified so far, and more than 100 of their names are highlighted in the exhibition. One identified maker included in the exhibition is Edgefield’s best-known artist, Dave — later recorded as David Drake — who boldly signed, dated and incised verses on many of his jars, despite literacy being illegal among enslaved people at the time. “Hear Me Now” features many of Dave’s monumental masterpieces, along with a video featuring Dave’s newly discovered descendants Pauline Baker, Priscilla Carolina, Daisy Whitner and John Williams, in which they reflect on his work and their family connections.

Among the other exhibition highlights are 19 face vessels or jugs, which served as powerful spiritual objects and were likely made by the Edgefield potters for their own use. Their emergence in the region roughly coincides with the 1858 arrival in Georgia of the slave ship The Wanderer, which illegally transported more than 400 captive Africans to the United States approximately 50 years after the transatlantic slave trade had been outlawed. More than 100 of those individuals were sent to Edgefield, where they were put to work in the potteries. Growing evidence suggests that their arrival brought African-inspired art traditions, religion and culture to the area. The face vessels resemble nkisi, ritual objects that were important in West-Central African religious practices to facilitate communication between the living and the dead.

“Hear Me Now” examines the continuing legacy of Edgefield with works by contemporary Black artists that respond to and amplify Edgefield’s story, including Simone Leigh’s monumental ceramic work “Jug” (2022); Theaster Gates’ “Signature Study” (2020), which references Dave’s work; and Woody De Othello’s “Secret Safe,” a large-scale vessel that the acquired High in 2023.

“Hear Me Now: The Black Potters of Old Edgefield, South Carolina” is presented in the Special Exhibition Galleries on the Second Level of the High’s Stent Family Wing.










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