Walter Stephen

Walter Stephen is best known for creating cameo ware, a unique line of functional pottery with painted layers of porcelain on stoneware.

Stephen's work is reminiscent of Wedgewood Jasperware. The imagary on his ...
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Typical Marks

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    Biography

    Walter Stephen is best known for creating cameo ware, a unique line of functional pottery with painted layers of porcelain on stoneware.

    Stephen's work is reminiscent of Wedgewood Jasperware. The imagary on his work depicts subject matter drawn from his youth and American folklife: spinning wheels, fiddlers, log cabins, and ox-drawn covered wagons. Stephen was also known for the crystalline glazes he developed and used. He is credited with being the first to use crystalline glazes in the southeast.

    Inspired by the Arts and Craft Movement, Stephen?s first pottery was made in his twenties. He worked with his mother, artist Nellie Randal Stephen, and together they founded Nonconnah Pottery. He closed the pottery when his parents died in 1910, and eventually, with the help of others, established Pisgah Forest Pottery in 1926. The pottery closed in 2014 after the death of Thomas Case, Stephen?s step-grandson.

    Walter Stephen was mentored in North Carolina by Oscar Bachelder.

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    Apprenticeships & Residencies
    Primary Work Experience

    Other

    Public Collections

    American Museum of  Ceramic Art, AMOCA, Pomona, California

    Asheville Art Museum, Asheville, North Carolina

    Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, Tennessee

    Mint Museum, Charlotte, North Carolina

    North Carolina Museum of History, Raleigh, North Carolina

    Southern Highland Craft Guild, Asheville, North Carolina

    Bibliography

    Leftwich, Rodney Henderson. Pisgah Forest and Nonconnah: The Potteries of Walter B. Stephen. Bradenton FL, 2006.

    CV or Resume

    Website(s)
    Tags (related topics)

    Southern Highland Craft Guild

    Center for Craft Creativity and Design

    Nonconnah Art Pottery

    Pisgah Forest Pottery

    cameo ware

    Crystalline Glaze

    Nellie Randal Stephen

    Thomas Case

    Oscar Bachelder

    Skyland, North Carolina

    American Museum of Ceramic Art

    AMOCA

    American Ceramic Society

    ACerS

    Center for Craft

    CfC

    Citation: Walter Stephen, "The Marks Project."
    Last modified April 29, 2026. https://www.themarksproject.org/artists/walter-benjamin-stephen

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