Art & Reform: Sara Galner, the Saturday Evening Girls, and the Paul Revere Pottery

Paperback
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Author: Nonie Gadsden

ISBN-10: 0878467165

ISBN-13: 9780878467167

Category: Collectible Pottery - U.S.

The handmade ceramics of the Paul Revere Pottery, often enlivened with stylized images of animals, flowers or abstract patterns, are best known today by the name of the girls' club whose members created the wares: the Saturday Evening Girls (SEG) club. Local reformers organized this club in 1899 to provide cultural activities for young Italian and Jewish immigrant girls of Boston's North End. Under the guidance of designer and illustrator Edith Brown, and as a way of helping with difficult...

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The handmade ceramics of the Paul Revere Pottery, often enlivened with stylized images of animals, flowers or abstract patterns, are best known today by the name of the girls' club whose members created the wares: the Saturday Evening Girls (SEG) club. Local reformers organized this club in 1899 to provide cultural activities for young Italian and Jewish immigrant girls of Boston's North End. Under the guidance of designer and illustrator Edith Brown, and as a way of helping with difficult family finances, the group soon turned to crafts. Before long, SEG ceramics had caught on, and were being sold thought department stores in cities throughout the Eastern United States; though their success was largely curtailed by World War I, the pottery continued to operate until 1942. TITLE TK offers a briskly written, handsomely illustrated introduction to a little-known episode in Boston's cultural history, discussing the role of the SEG club in the life of the city's immigrant community and its ties to education reform and the Arts and Crafts movement. More than this, it presents some 50 examples of the ceramics themselves, mostly by Sara Galner, one of the group's most gifted members, showing the wit, charm, quiet beauty and lasting influence of these remarkable decorative objects.