Rare stoneware jug depicting acrobats acquired for New York State Museum by collector Adam Weitsman

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Rare stoneware jug depicting acrobats acquired for New York State Museum by collector Adam Weitsman
Acrobat Jug. Manufactured by Fulper Bros., Flemington, New Jersey, c. 1880. Donated to NYSM by Adam Weitsman.



ALBANY, NY.- A four-gallon stoneware jug depicting acrobats manufactured by Fulper Bros. in Flemington , New Jersey during the 1880s is now part of the New York State Museum ’s Weitsman Collection of American Stoneware. Now on display at the State Museum , the historically significant piece of stoneware was recently acquired for the Museum by stoneware collector and benefactor, Adam Weitsman.

The acrobat jug, a sought-after example of decorated American stoneware, has been breaking stoneware record prices at auction for decades and Weitsman had wanted the piece for over thirty years. Weitsman recently purchased the jug from Allen Katz Americana.

“This iconic piece of Americana now joins the nation’s most important collection of decorated American stoneware at the New York State Museum ,” said State Museum Director Mark Schaming. “Through Adam Weitsman’s visionary acquisitions and generosity this extraordinary, singular collection is now available for all New Yorkers to appreciate.”

Abraham Fulper produced an assortment of earthenware, stoneware and tile products at his Flemington, New Jersey pottery in the 1860s and 1870s. After his death, his sons continued the pottery and during the 1880s the company became known as Fulper Bros. or Fulper Bros. & Co. Fulper Bros. stoneware often featured unique decorations. The acrobats on this jug may have been inspired by a traveling circus or performers at the nearby annual agricultural Flemington Fair. Stoneware was the plastic of the nineteenth century, used to create a variety of utilitarian vessels for the storage and processing of food and liquids. The potter, or in some cases a talented decorator who worked at the pottery, would enhance these utilitarian wares with artful designs that are today considered prime examples of American folk art.

The acrobat jug is currently on exhibit at the New York State Museum, along with forty other pieces of the Weitsman stoneware collection, and will be featured in a forthcoming book, Art For the People: Decorated Stoneware from the Weitsman Collection by John Scherer, Curator Emeritus of the State Museum, that will illustrate some two hundred pieces of decorated stoneware donated to the State Museum by Adam Weitsman since 1996. The collection demonstrates how New York State was a leading manufacturer of stoneware throughout the nineteenth century.










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