Size: 8.5 x 11
Pages: 228
Illustrations: 40 b&w photos, 55 color photos
edited by Jill Beute Koverman and Jane Przybysz
The inclusion of this book in the Open Carolina collection is made possible by the generous funding of
"Much of what the world knows about the enslaved Edgefield potter, artist, and poet David 'Dave' Drake is the direct result of ceramic scholar Jill Koverman's original 1998 groundbreaking publication. This updated and greatly expanded volume—with essays contributed by a legion of Koverman's acolytes—now reflects the most comprehensive thinking on Dave and his important place in American social history and culture. It is essential reading for all students of American ceramics history."—Robert Hunter, coeditor, Ceramics in America
"Combining exceptional potting skills with inscribed verses, names, dates, and symbols, David 'Dave' Drake is recognized as one of the most consequential Black artisans of the nineteenth century. This collection of essays sheds light on Dave's life and pottery and is a valuable contribution to our understanding of Southern folk art and Black potters of the Edgefield District."—J. W. Joseph, PhD, RPA, New South Associates, Inc.
"Like I Made This Jar before it, The Words and Wares of David Drake presents an excellent spectrum of perspectives attesting to African American creativity, perseverance, and accomplishment. Artists and experts present new, distinct, and fascinating insights into David Drake's intellect and artistry within cross-currents of African, European, and Asian legacies."—Christopher Fennell, professor of anthropology and law, University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign, author of The Archaeology of Craft and Industry,and founding editor, Journal of AfricanDiaspora Archaeology and Heritage
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