Bowl #3 in Dogwood White 9"dia. (Benjamin Owen IV)
Bowl #3 in Dogwood White 9"dia. (Benjamin Owen IV)
Bowl #3 in Dogwood White 9"dia. (Benjamin Owen IV)
Bowl #3 in Dogwood White 9"dia. (Benjamin Owen IV)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bowl #3 in Dogwood White 9"dia. (Benjamin Owen IV)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bowl #3 in Dogwood White 9"dia. (Benjamin Owen IV)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bowl #3 in Dogwood White 9"dia. (Benjamin Owen IV)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bowl #3 in Dogwood White 9"dia. (Benjamin Owen IV)

Bowl #3 in Dogwood White 9"dia. (Benjamin Owen IV)

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   Hand-thrown by Benjamin Owen IV. This stunning white glaze works well for wedding gifts.  The rich color of the red clay enhances the white glaze coating.  Dishwasher- and microwave-safe.  Measuring 9"dia. x 1.5"h.
Please Note: What appear to be white spots on the surface are reflections from photo lighting.

    Benjamin Owen IV (b. 2005), the youngest child of sixth-generation potter Ben Owen III, has been making pots since a young age.  Benjamin graduated from Uwharrie Charter Academy High School in Asheboro, NC in 2023.  He is currently attending Liberty University in Lynchburg, VA as a freshman.  His current passions include governmental science, policymaking, investment, and turning clay in his father’s studio.  As a long-standing tradition in the Owen Family, creating with clay is a way for Benjamin to carry on his family’s legacy and connect with his roots.  Benjamin’s work has been featured in the Mint Museum in Charlotte, NC and the Gallery at Grandover in Greensboro, NC.

   During the 1920s, Benjamin IV's great-grandfather, Ben Owen Sr., was a potter at Jugtown Pottery.  While there, Jacque Busbee did extensive research to create many of the colors for the pottery.  Chinese and Japanese white finishes inspired the Dogwood White glaze for pottery with a thick coating that resembles icing on a cake.  In 1928, the Busbees of Jugtown entered a vase, made by Ben Owen, in the Dogwood festival with this white glaze.  The vase was awarded best in the show and from that time forward, the vase was called the Dogwood Vase, and the glaze was named Dogwood White.  This glaze works well for weddings and flower displays.

This piece is hand-signed by Benjamin Owen IV with the year made (2024).