Archive for the ‘Pottery - Wheatley’ Category

Wheatley Pottery Bird Bath No. 238-240 Price $12.00 in 1924

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Has Your Lawn a Bird Bath and Other Garden Pottery?  This 1924 Wheatley Pottery Co. advertisement asks.  The picture shows a highly stylized bird bath no. 238-240 for $12.00 net.  The weight is 80 lbs and the height is 24 inches.

Photobucket

Wheatley Pottery Cornstack Buttress Vase 605 or 60S

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

This lovely Wheatley Pottery Cornstack vase measures 11.25″ tall x 8.75″ wide.  Like most Wheatley vases, it can easily be confused for Grueby.  The estimated value is $10,000 - $15,000. It dates from 1903-1909.

Photobucket

Wheatley Mark2

Wheatley Pottery Marks

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Wheatley Pottery (1880-1927) Thomas J. Wheatley had worked in Cincinnati, Ohio, with the founders of the art pottery movement, including M. Louise McLaughlin of Rookwood. Wheatley made pottery in the sale style as Grueby Pottery. In about 1903 Wheatley started producing art pottery using matt green glaze. Wheatley developed a process for casting Grueby’s low-relief surface decoration using a mold. The architectural designs had vertical lines that concealed mold marks. The heavy, textured opaque glaze obscured any remaining mold marks. Wheatley also made hand modeled pottery.

T.J. Wheatley played a role in founding the Cincinnati Art Pottery in 1880, as well as T.J. Wheatley and Company, 1880-82, and the Wheatley Pottery Company with Isaac Kahn in 1903.

Wheatley didn’t experiment, but rather created molds very similar to patterns already known to be in demand by the public. Wheatley started producing garden pottery in “antique form” in ~1909. Like so many other factories, Wheatley’s plant was destroyed by fire in 1910. This is when production of Art Pottery ceased. Wheatley continued to manufacture garden pottery, and when Wheatley died in 1917 he was only making faience tiles, garden furniture, bird baths, vases and boxes.

Art pottery pieces from the Wheatley Pottery Company were signed with conjoined WP within a circle, either impressed or on an attached paper label. Architectural and faience products were signed “Wheatley” in block letters or with impressed catalog numbers.

Photobucket

Wheatley Mark2