Episode 38 | International Folk Art Showcase & Ancient Face Jugs

Matt and Sully kick off with some international flair as Sully shares his folk art discoveries from Poland and Denmark – including a mysterious pottery piece that might be 200 years old and a painting on board he snagged for five bucks in Copenhagen. The conversation flows from European finds to the economics of American pottery, exploring how glass factories nearly killed traditional potters until they pivoted to decorative and tourist pieces. Matt breaks down the Burlon Craig timeline and explains why Reinhart family face jugs are rarer than Edgefield pottery, while a surprise call from Matt's dad confirms a $5,500 Reinhart sale.

From ancient Greek Dionysus vessels to contemporary Nova Scotia carvings, this episode traces folk art's universal human appeal across cultures and millennia. Whether you're fascinated by Polish religious carvings, Egyptian miniatures, or North Carolina pottery traditions, you'll discover that the impulse to create art with your hands knows no borders or time periods.


CHAPTERS

  • 00:00 | Intro and European folk art preview

  • 02:13 | European Finds – Sully's Denmark and Poland discoveries

  • 05:08 | Polish Pottery Mystery – dating a potentially ancient piece

  • 08:06 | Haggling Across Borders – international picking stories

  • 09:15 | European Folk Art Museum Tour – Polish religious carvings and paintings

  • 15:10 | Universal Art Forms – why dragons and faces appear everywhere

  • 19:04 | Polish Folk Art Analysis – academic vs self-taught European work

  • 25:01 | Ancient Face Jugs – 2,500-year-old Greek pottery discoveries

  • 26:58 | Face Jug Philosophy – why humans naturally create faces in art

  • 31:06 | Pottery Economics – how glass factories changed everything

  • 32:09 | Dad's Phone Call – $5,500 Reinhart face jug sale confirmation

  • 34:00 | Burlon Craig Timeline – the last utilitarian potter's transition

  • 36:07 | Regional Collecting – North Carolina pottery population math

  • 47:16 | Hickory Pottery Festival – navigating overwhelming choices

  • 50:24 | Nova Scotia Connection – living folk artists from our northern neighbors

  • 53:08 | Universal Folk Art – why every culture creates the same forms

  • 54:04 | Regional Picking Hotspots – Shenandoah Valley and Northeast treasures

  • 58:28 | Salem Pottery History – fish jugs and $100,000 turtle flasks

  • 1:02:03 | Collecting Strategy – starting regional then branching out

  • 1:03:41 | Future Episodes – Kyle's collection, West Virginia pottery, and t-shirt plans

  • 1:06:00 | Future Episodes – Kyle's collection, West Virginia pottery, and t-shirt plans


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Episode 39 | Wade Ledbetter: A Picker's Life & Salt Glaze Pottery Lesson

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Episode 37 | Inside Matt's Home Gallery & The Real Cost of Building a Folk Art Collection