The Potters | |
Founding Location: | St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
Type: | Artists group |
Leader Name: | Williamina Parrish |
Leader Title2: | Mentor |
Leader Name2: | Lillie Rose Ernst |
The Potters was an informal group of American female artists in St. Louis, Missouri, who printed their original art, poetry and prose in The Potter's Wheel, a monthly artistic and literary magazine produced from November 1904 to October 1907. The group was mentored by Lillie Rose Ernst, assistant superintendent of education in the St. Louis public school system. Several members of the group went on to have successful careers in the arts, notably Sara Teasdale, Caroline Risque, and the Parrish Sisters.
The name The Potter's Wheel was inspired by Caroline Risque's cover art for the inaugural edition in November 1904, which depicted a pair of potters sitting opposite one another. Williamina Parrish, who acted as editor-in-chief of the magazine, preferred to call the group the "Self and Mutual Admiration Society".
The members of the group were in their teens and early twenties. They included:[1]
St. Louis educator Lillie Rose Ernst was the mentor of The Potters.[7] The group described themselves as "idolatrous females worshipping a yellow-haired Amazon"; they called Ernst a "blond brute...the star of our existence".[8] Some members of the group, including Ernst, are suspected to have been bisexual or lesbian. Several of the artists had known Ernst when they were students at Central High School, where Ernst taught botany.
Teasdale dedicated a sonnet to Ernst which begins:
The group produced The Potters Wheel magazine monthly from November 1904 to October 1907.[8] Only one copy of each magazine was produced each month, "hand-lettered and hand-illustrated" by The Potters themselves.[9] Contents included poetry, fiction, photographs, and needlework.[8] [9] The thick, textured pages of the hand-bound magazine were decorated with "border designs, illuminations, and watercolors". The cover art often sported "mythological or fantastical scenes, in tones resembling stained glass".
The group circulated each issue among their peers with the expectation of receiving constructive criticism.[8] These critiques were printed in booklets which later became part of The Potters Wheel Collection at the Missouri History Museum.[9]
The magazine attracted the attention of St. Louis newspaperman William Marion Reedy, who commissioned an article about it for his Reedy's Mirror in 1905.
The Potters disbanded in late 1907 and "drew lots" to decide who would keep the magazines they had produced. Teasdale received three issues, which were eventually stored at Yale University. The Missouri History Museum was the beneficiary of 16 issues, in addition to the 12 booklets of critiques.
Many members of The Potters are buried at Bellefontaine Cemetery, located in St. Louis.[10]
Another woman related to The Potters was Zoe Akins (1886–1958). She was not officially part of The Potters, as she was too young to join the group. However, she was friends with several of the members, and became companion to Teasdale after the group disbanded. A woman related to Akins is Thekla M. Bernays (1856–1931, buried in Block 16, Lot 2358 of Bellefontaine Cemetery).