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Public Domain

Charles D. 'Bullet' Hyten and Niloak Pottery

Vase

1904

Scroll

Vase

1904

Physical Qualities Clay, 4 5/8 x 2 5/8 x 2 5/8 in. (11.7 x 6.7 x 6.7 cm)
Credit Line Gift of Richard L. Goodbar, Lutherville, Maryland
Object Number 2000.210
Niloak Pottery produced these vessels with varied swirls of red, blue, gray, brown, and cream in simple shapes and with unglazed exteriors—characteristics that highlighted the local Arkansas kaolin clay from which they were made. Though marketed as “wholly natural,” the colors came from oxides (chemical compounds) added to the clay to produce different colors, such as cobalt for blue or ferric for red, that were then combined through a patented process. The swirled clay means that no two vessels are alike. The first exhibition of Niloak vessels took place in 1910 in Little Rock, Arkansas, during a convention promoting economic development, placing the natural resources of the state on display through the medium of craft.
Anita Jones, Baltimore Museum of Art, "Woven Rainbows: American Indian Trade Blankets," November 9, 2005-June 11, 2006

Inscribed: BASE, underneath, (stamped), 'NILOAK'

Designer

Charles D. ‘Bullet’ Hyten

1876–1943

American, 1877 - 1944
Meet Charles D. ‘Bullet’ Hyten

Manufacturer

Niloak Pottery

1908–1945

1909-1946
Meet Niloak Pottery

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