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Event Details

Hosted By
Telfair Museums

Date(s)

May 30, 2025 - September 7, 2025

Venue

207 W York St ,
Savannah, GA 31401

In 1895, administrators in the art department at the H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College in New Orleans, Louisiana, a women's higher education institution that was joined to Tulane University, started a new commercial enterprise so that their students could put the skills they learned in their art and design courses into practice. A group of potters, mostly men, created the various objects out of clays sourced throughout the South, and women graduates of the art program painted them with images of flora and fauna. Newcomb Pottery quickly received praise throughout the US for the quality of its designs and the perceived authenticity of its representation of Southern regional identity, and these strong ties to location remain present today, long after the Pottery's closure in 1939.

This exhibition focuses on the Newcomb potters' material and chosen subjects, their relationships to regional identity, and the Pottery's changing approaches to these subjects over time. Tasked with representing the region through their work, Newcomb designers earned a reputation for turning to their local environment for inspiration. This exhibition explores how designs that featured repeating, semi-abstract, and carefully selected plants such as waterlilies eventually transformed into muted landscapes of moss-draped oaks and cypresses, and the way these images matched romanticized visions of the South that were growing in the 20th century. The Moss Mystique asks visitors to reconsider their ideas about what makes a place unique. In an adjacent gallery, interdisciplinary artist Raheleh Filsoofi's new multimedia exhibition (Un)Grounded will respond to the complexities of Newcomb pottery.

Admission

$30 for adult, $27 for senior/Military, $20 for students, $10 for children (6-12 yrs), Children 5 and under are free.

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