








Counts' work reflects his interest in preserving the art forms of Appalachia. Another major influence was the aesthetics of the Bauhaus Movement which he absorbed during his apprenticeship with Marguerite Wildenhain at Pond Farm. Counts studied with three leading of the potters of the time, F.
Carlton Ball, Susan Peterson and George James while studying at the University of Southern California. In 1959 with his first wife, Rube Nelle Waldrop Counts, he founded and operated Beaver Ridge Pottery near Knoxville, Tennessee. There are 10,000 pieces inscribed "Beaver Ridge". Later the Counts established a production and training center devoted to pottery and quilting at Rising Fawn on Lookout Mountain, Georgia which was the Counts' studio for 25 years. A speech about African pottery by Michael Cardew in 1972 changed the course of Charles Counts' life.He soon moved to Nigeria with his second wife, Hedi Bak, where they lived until his death there from Malaria in 2000. Counts was also an accomplished quilter and weaver. Ceramic stoneware with circle designs and blue glaze. In good original condition, there are no issues or repairs. Signed on the bottom Rising Fawn.
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