Paul Bogatay
Josh DeWeese is known for his wheel thrown and hand altered pottery. From smaller functional forms to large storage jars and baskets: DeWeese primarily fires his work in wood kilns and at ...
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About
- Biography
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Josh DeWeese is known for his wheel thrown and hand altered pottery. From smaller functional forms to large storage jars and baskets: DeWeese primarily fires his work in wood kilns and at times uses salt, soda, and local clays to enhance the finished surfaces.
DeWeese says about his process: ?I have a passion for painting with ceramic materials on a three-dimensional form, and having the rhythm of the pattern unfold as it moves around the pot. I enjoy the phenomenon of the melt and the quality of color and depth that develops through the glaze. The loss of control is important, blurring the initial pattern made with the hand. The viscosity, depth, and movement of the glaze are important elements in the final surface.?
The son of the artists, DeWeese was raised in an artistic home, this upbringing laid the foundation for his life as a ceramic artist. Both during undergraduate and graduate studies, DeWeese was able to hone his craft under artists: Ken Ferguson, Victor Babu, George Timock, and Clary Illian (Kansas City Art Institute), and; Val Cushing, Wayne Higby, John and Andrea Gill, Anne Currier, Tony Hepburn, and Jeff Oestreich (Alfred University). A ceramic artist and educator, DeWeese has exhibited and taught workshops internationally.
Together with artist Dean Adams he has co-founded the International Wild Clay Research Project (http://art.montana.edu/areas-of-study/ceramics/wild-clay-project/) which led to study of indigenous ceramic materials and processes around the world, travelling to China, Korea, Chile,Italy, Japan and Thailand.
" - Apprenticeships & Residencies
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1927-1928
Studied with Arthur E. Baggs, Cleveland Institute of Art, Cleveland, Ohio
1930-1932Rockefeller Foundation Fellow
1955-1956Fulbright Fellow, Study of Mingei, Japan
- Primary Work Experience
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1929-1930
Ceramic Designer, Cowan Pottery, Rocky River, Ohio
1930-1934Ceramic Designer, Arthur Baggs Studio, Marblehead Potteries, Marblehead, Massachusetts (summers)
1934-1972Bogatay Ceramic Studio, Columbus, Ohio
1934-1939Temporary Assistant Instructor in Design, Ohio State University
-1935Ceramic Designer, Robinson-Ransbottom Pottery, Company, Roseville, Ohio
1935-1938Designer, Ford Ceramic Arts, Inc., Columbus, Ohio
1940-1970Instructor and Professor of Design and Ceramics, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio
Other
- Public Collections
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Ball State University Art Gallery, Muncie, Indiana
The Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio
Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, Ohio
Museum of Arts and Design, New York, New York
Wichita Art Association, Wichita, Kansas
Springfield Museums, Springfield, Massachusetts
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Renwick Gallery, Washington, DC
- Bibliography
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Bassett, Mark, and Victoria Naumann. Cowan Pottery and Cleveland School. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing, 1997.
Exhibition of Contemporary American Ceramics. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 1937.
Folk, Thomas. “The Art of Paul Bogatay.” Ceramics Monthly 39 (June/August 1991).
Lestock, Carol. Rocky River, Ohio (OH) (Images of America). Mount Pleasant, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2002.
Levin, Elaine. The History of American Ceramics, 1607 to the Present. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1988.
Peeler, Marj, and Richard Peeler. “Potters of US and Japan.” DVD
Peterson, Susan. The Craft and Art of Clay. Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice Hall, 1992.
Murphy, James L. “Ford Ceramic Arts, Columbus, Ohio.” The Journal of the American Art Pottery Association 14 no. 2 (1998).
“Obituary.” Ceramics Monthly 20 (May 1972).
“Portrait.” Design (Indianapolis, Ind.) 38 (November 1936).
“Robineau Memorial Ceramic Exhibition Prize Winners.” American Ceramic Society Bulletin 15 (November 1936).
“Tableware Design Research at Ohio State University.” Journal of the American Ceramic Society 13 (December 1930).
- CV or Resume
- Website(s)
Citation: Paul Bogatay, "The Marks Project."
Last modified April 29, 2026. https://www.themarksproject.org/artists/paul-bogatay

