The Mad Potter of Biloxi
Self-styled eccentric George E. Ohr's wild, weird, wonderful pots gathered dust in a garage for half a century. Now architect Frank Gehry is designing a museum dedicated to the artist who made them
- By Bruce Watson
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
some are born eccentric, some achieve eccentricity and some, including certain rock stars and artists, have it thrust upon them. Evidence suggests that Ohr’s “madness” was a mix of all three. Born in Biloxi in 1857, he was the second of five children—“3 hens, 1 rooster and a duck,” he later wrote in a two-page autobiography published in a ceramics and glass journal in 1901.
Ohr considered himself the duck, a mischievous oddball who was, as he once put it, always in “hot aqua.” After elementary school, he spent a single season at a German school in New Orleans before dropping out in his early teens. He apprenticed as a file cutter, a tinker and as an assistant in his father’s blacksmith shop, then put out to sea. After one voyage, however, he decided that a sailor’s life was not for him. Finally, at 22, he chanced upon his life’s work when a friend invited him to New Orleans to learn to be a potter. “When I found the potter’s wheel I felt it all over like a wild duck in water,” he remembered. After learning how to “boss a little piece of clay into a gallon jug,” Ohr set out on his own to see what other potters were doing. In the early 1880s, he traveled through 16 states, dropping in on ceramics studios, shows and museums. By the time he got back to Biloxi in 1883, he had absorbed the essence of America’s burgeoning art-pottery movement. In Cincinnati’s Rookwood studio and a few others, potters were decorating their wares based on Japanese or French ceramics, adding animals, birds and bright floral designs. Ohr returned home determined to make art, not pots. But first he had to make a living.
While still staying with his parents, Ohr built a pottery shop next door to his father’s house, even crafting his own wheel and kiln, all for $26.80. Then he went looking for clay. Heading up the muddy TchoutacabouffaRiver, Ohr spent days digging the red clay along its banks, loading it onto a barge and floating it all back home. To this day, admirers suspect there was something in that clay that enabled Ohr to create wafer-thin pots with a delicacy no one else has ever equaled. Yet at first, there was nothing special about Ohr’s pottery. Working in his small shop, he supported his wife, Josephine, and their ten children by churning out chimney flues, planters and ordinary pitchers. He amused some customers with pots in anatomical shapes and clay coins imprinted with lewd picture puzzles. In his spare time, he experimented with pieces he called his “mud babies.” Brooding over them, he wrote, “with the same tenderness a mortal child awakens in its parents,” he created fantastic shapes glazed with wild colors. When he took his mud babies to exhibitions in New Orleans and Chicago, they sold poorly. Back home in Biloxi, his humorous signs promoting his “Pot-Ohr-E” gave Ohr a reputation as an eccentric whose shop was worth a visit mainly for a laugh.
Potters say that fire adds devilish details to their work. No matter how carefully one throws a piece of ceramics, a kiln’s inferno causes chemical glazes to erupt in surprising colors. For Ohr, fire was a further catalyst for his creativity. At 2 a.m. on October 12, 1894, an alarm was sounded; Biloxi’s Bijou Oyster Saloon had caught fire. The blaze spread quickly through downtown. It raged through the Opera House, several cottages belonging to Ohr’s father and the grocery run by Ohr’s mother. Finally, it gutted the Pot-Ohr-E. Later that day, Ohr picked through the ashes to dig out the charred remains of his “killed babies.” He kept most of them for the rest of his life. When asked why, he replied, “Did you ever hear of a mother so inhuman that she would cast off her deformed child?” Aloan enabled him to rebuild his shop, adding its telltale “pagoda,” and like a glaze that turns an astonishing magenta when fired, Ohr emerged from the tragedy determined to make pottery as distinctive as he was. “I am the apostle of individuality,” he once said, “the brother of the human race, but I must be myself and I want every vase of mine to be itself.”
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Comments (10)
When in grad school I wrote a paper on potter our. I am so glad to see that he is recognized for his genius. Someday I hope to be able to visit biloxi and his museum and see his babies.
Posted by larry riffle on November 19,2012 | 09:05 AM
I have some of his stuff......I would like to talk to someone about it.
Posted by Johnny c. Doerner on June 27,2012 | 04:42 PM
I just visited the Ohr-Okeefe Museum in Biloxi this week. I highly recommend it!
Posted by Sandra Byram on March 18,2012 | 03:42 PM
I believe I have a little brown jug by george ohr. It looks just like the one on the antiques roadshow. On the episode of naughhty or nice. I'm not sure if a picture is on the bottom of the jug or not. I was wondering where in wisconsin I might be able to sell it?
Posted by richard tormey on January 24,2012 | 03:18 PM
Wounderful, death resurrects life, I hope he's still throwing living beauty, still, we probably won't appreciate, or see it the second time around. George O. may you never rest in peace! The world needs more!!!!
Posted by Nadine Mckean on May 30,2010 | 06:57 PM
i wonder how it was back then ????
Posted by laura on March 8,2010 | 12:03 PM
Born a military brat in Biloxi and claiming it as home the story of G.E.O. has been of interest to me since first hearing of it. One reason is I worked at the Avalez Hotel which stood almost conjoined to that garage. I was only 17 so I was very curious about everything, but a boarded up building was never to be ignored. I can't tell you how many times I tried to break in that building just to look around. If you have time please tell me more. At almost 60 I am still spooked. I am on facebook. Thank you for sharing this wonderful story and spread it around. It would be a shame to lose him....again
Posted by Julia Barone on April 2,2009 | 06:09 AM
George Edgar Ohr was my husband's great great grandfather and we knew family stories about him, but this was a very interesting article. Thank you.
Posted by Kathy A. Coletti on February 17,2009 | 07:08 PM
While watching the Antiques Road Show,I became intrigued about Ohr and found too little information about him from other sources. This article has amply satisfied my curiosity. Thank you for making this information available.
Posted by Dorothy Arnold-Cox on February 14,2009 | 03:49 PM
Thank you for having this Feb., 2004, article available online without requiring a "password" or a credit card. I've had subscriptions to your magazine on and off since the 1970"s. Thank you again....... R A H
Posted by Reginald Hoffler, M.D. on September 15,2008 | 08:36 PM
Looking for a home... Museum Intrest sought...?? Regards, From New Hampshire
Posted by Ohr Vase / Jug Located on March 10,2008 | 07:13 PM