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Harding Black

1912Born Aransas Pass, Texas

2004Died Reno, Nevada

PRIMARY WORK EXPERIENCE

1932-1956Ceramic instructor, Witte Museum, San Antonio, Texas

1937-1939Superintendent of ceramic installation in reconstruction project co-sponsored by the National Youth Administration and the WPA, San Antonio, Texas

1956-1997Studio Potter

BIOGRAPHY

 

Harding Black made functional stoneware pots fired in a high-fire, reduction atmosphere kiln; he also worked in mid-range fired earthenware. His earliest forms were coil built in the manner of Pueblo pottery. Other forms include wheel thrown bowls, slip-cast cylinders, ashtrays in the shape of sombreros for use in a Mexican restaurant, and table top-sized sculpture. He also made jars, compotes, vases, pitchers, and birdfeeders.

Harding Black is known for his extensive glaze research. He is considered a pioneer of modern handmade pottery in Texas. As a self-taught chemist, he reproduced ancient Chinese and Oriental glazes and was famed for sharing his extensive catalog of glazes he had personally formulated.

In 1931, Harding Black joined the Witte Museum Archaeological Society. This gave him access to the Museum’s collection of Native American pottery, and marked the beginning of his interest in and work with clay. Rudolph Staffel was his first pottery teacher in 1933; his first kiln was built with plans from Newcomb College. Other influences include Oriental Pottery, and Bernard Leach’s A Potters Book, first published in 1940.

In the 1950’s, Harding Black became closely affiliated with Georgeanna Greer, a local pediatrician, collector, and ceramic history aficionado who studied with him at the Witte museum. They shared an interest in rediscovering abandoned kilns and old potteries, some of them family slave potteries, such as the Wilson Pottery. In 1971 they co-wrote The Meyer Family: Master Potters of Texas.

The Harding Black Ceramics Research Center at Baylor University in Waco, Texas houses The Harding Black Collection and Archive including research material, extensive glaze tests, as well as glaze recipes, records, and hand written notes.

In 1980, Harding Black donated his personal papers, correspondence, photos, etc. to the Smithsonian Research Collection.