Blue Grape Jar
This piece was made in the regional southern folk pottery tradition and can be linked to the 19th-century African-American slave folk art tradition...
View full detailsThis piece was made in the regional southern folk pottery tradition and can be linked to the 19th-century African-American slave folk art tradition...
View full detailsThis piece was made in the regional southern folk pottery tradition and can be linked to the 19th-century African-American slave folk art tradition...
View full detailsThis piece was made in the regional southern folk pottery tradition which can be linked to the 19th-century African-American slave pottery traditio...
View full detailsThis whimsical piece began as a jug form and was made in the regional southern folk pottery tradition which can be linked to the 19th-century Afric...
View full detailsThis distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small nu...
View full detailsThis distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small nu...
View full detailsThis distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small nu...
View full detailsThis distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small nu...
View full detailsThis distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small nu...
View full detailsThis distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small nu...
View full detailsThis distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small nu...
View full detailsThis distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small nu...
View full detailsThis distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small nu...
View full detailsThis piece was made in the regional southern folk pottery tradition which can be linked to the 19th-century African-American slave pottery traditio...
View full detailsThis piece was made in the regional southern folk pottery tradition and can be linked to the 19th-century African-American slave folk art tradition...
View full detailsThis piece was made in the regional southern folk pottery tradition and can be linked to the 19th-century African-American slave folk art tradition...
View full details