Status message

Your information has been submitted.

   Printer version

Will Ruggles, Douglas Rankin, Rock Creek Pottery

Biography to Display: 

1956 Born Elkhart, Indiana

APPRENTICESHIPS AND RESIDENCIES

1976-1978 Apprentice, Randy Johnston Pottery, River Falls, Wisconsin

PRIMARY WORK EXPERIENCE

1978-1980 Co-owner, Potter, Hillcrest Pottery, Beldenville, Wisconsin

1980-2007 Potter, Rock Creek Pottery, Bakersville, North Carolina

BIOGRAPHY 

Will Ruggles, along with Douglass Rankin, made a wide line of functional, wood-fired pottery: tall jars, pitch­ers, platters, plates, teapots, cups, rice bowls and serving bowls.

The pots are wheel thrown or drape molded with simple decorations: sometimes plain brushwork with slip, and once-fired glazes. 

Will Ruggles and Douglass Rankin co-owned and operated Rock Creek Pottery in North Carolina for many years. Their pots are influenced by the Hamada-Leach-Yanagi tradition in aesthetics and production methods, which were introduced to them by Randy Johnston, who had studied in Japan.

In addition to being well known for their pottery, Ruggles and Rankin held instructional workshops on kiln building, advising and helping many potters and institutions.

As of June 2017, The Marks Project is not aware that Ruggles and Rankin are producing any pottery.

PUBLIC COLLECTIONS

Public Collections to Display: 

Gregg Museum of Art and Design, North Carolina State

Midwest Museum of Art, Elkhart, Indiana

North Carolina Museum of History, Raleigh, North Carolina

Southern Highland Craft Guild, Asheville, North Carolina

University, Raleigh, North Carolina

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Bibliography to Display: 

Harkey, Linda. “Will Ruggles and Douglass Rankin: Rock Creek Pottery.” Ceramics Monthly 50, no. 7 (September. 2002).

Hluch, Kevin A. The Art of Contemporary American Pottery.  Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2000.

Hopper, Robin. Stayin’ Alive: Survival Tactics for the Visual Artist. Iola WI: Krause Publications, 2003.

Joslin, Michael and Ruth Joslin. More Mountain People, Places and Ways: Another Southern Appalachian Sampler. Johnson City TN: The Overmountain Press, 1992.

Lawton, Jim, Suzanne J. Tourtillott, and Linda Kupp. 500 Teapots: Contemporary Explorations of a Timeless Design, v. 2. Asheville NC: Lark Crafts 2013.

Minogue, Coll, and Robert Sanderson. Wood-fired Ceramics: Contemporary Practices. Philadelphia PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2000.

Rankin, Douglass, and Will Ruggles. “Rock Creek Climbing Kiln, Part I”. The Studio Potter 22, no. 1 (December 1993).

Rankin, Douglass, and Will Ruggles. “Rock Creek Climbing Kiln, Part II”. The Studio Potter 22, no. 2 (June 1994).

Tourtillott, Suzanne J. E. ed. 500 Bowls: Contemporary Explorations of a Timeless Design. Asheville NC: Lark Crafts: 2003.

Triplett, Kathy. Handbuilt Tableware: Making Distinctive Plates, Bowls, Bowls, Mugs, Teapots, and More. Asheville NC: Lark Crafts, 2003.

Troy, Jack. Wood-Fired Stoneware and Porcelain. Iola WI: Krause Publications, 1997.

 

WEBSITE(S):

www.rockcreekpottery.com

Artist's Studio: Rock Creek Pottery

 

Typical Marks

The typical mark is a stamped spiral with three dots in a rectangle with rounded corners, or a rectangle containing an upper case R followed by a lower case r.

 

ca 1983-2005
Pitcher
Date: 1983-2005
Materials: Stoneware
Method: Altered, Thrown
Surface Technique: Glaze
Southern Highland Craft Guild Collection
Photo: Southern Highland Craft Guild
Southern Highland Craft Guild Collection
Photo: Southern Highland Craft Guild
Mug
Materials: Stoneware
Method: Thrown and Altered
Surface Technique: Glaze, Woodfire
Teapot
Materials: Stoneware
Method: Thrown
Surface Technique: Glaze, Woodfire
Jean and Paul Adams Collection Scripps College
Photo: TMP
Jean and Paul Adams Collection Scripps College
Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP

Citation: "The Marks Project." Last modified July 22, 2023. http://www.themarksproject.org:443/marks/ruggles