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Collecting Eclectic Mystery Items, Nov. 2006 E-mail
Wednesday, 01 November 2006

CollectAdventures.aug06Collecting Eclectic Mystery Items

By Rosemary Lee Potter

Special to Tropical Breeze


The reason I wanted to talk with David Dorsett, teacher, is I was intrigued with our ongoing, but fragmented

 

Collecting mystery items is one thing. Collecting the reference books which identify them is another.

conversations for several months about items he’s collected. First there was a photo of a Native American rug he’d acquired and how he was trying to find out more about it. Then there was the casual remark that he also has a collection of Native American silver and pottery. Then there was the mention of American art pottery and knives. Had to talk. We arranged an after-school meeting with my hopes high of seeing some of this stuff and hearing the tale of Dorsett’s many adventures collecting it. I was not at all disappointed!
HopiBowl.nov06
Photos for Tropical Breeze by Ron Friley
Large Hopi pottery bowl by Zella Cheeda, David Dorsett Collection.
 AntelopeMark.nov06
Antelope artist mark on the underside of theZella Cheeda pottery bowl.

We sat down to chat, me dying to know what David had on the table all wrapped up in newspapers. First things first, though. David had no chance of avoiding becoming a collector.

From childhood, David was surrounded by artifacts and collectibles. In West Virginia, his grandparents’ home had all kinds of antiques from tools used to plow and an incubator to kettles for making soap and devices to turn out sausages.
Then there was an uncle whom his family cherished, one who was interested in taking time to talk with family youngsters. He was the one who let the boys dig minié balls out of the house’s logs and to choose clay marbles to own. He was the one who made sure David’s sister got an antique pin cushion and an old iron. David talked of trunks and quilts and beautiful furniture the uncle had made using gorgeous chestnut planks.

When David and his wife, Clara, married they furnished their home with antique furniture which back then could be purchased cheaply — such as a cherry drop-leaf table. Amazing! They bought a dresser with a mirror behind which, when it was later broken, the Dorsetts found newspapers dating to the 1840’s.  

The first item which David finally unwrapped that day was a large pottery bowl. He’d had it around 10-12 years and had purchased it at the Oldsmar Flea Market for $40. Its particularly striking designs fascinated David, enough so that he began to do research to determine its origin and perhaps even the artist who had created the pottery. He began using various reference books — some of which he’d purchased at flea markets and one which was sent to him. David phoned a curator at the Museum of Northern Arizona, who, having found a design book, one of only two in the archives, and having detected David’s passionate curiosity to identify the bowl and its artist, sent him one copy free! See! Collecting zeal is infectious!

With study, David learned that this marvelous bowl is from the Hopi tribe made in the 1930s by artist Zella Cheeda of the Sand and Snake clan, and probably in the village of Sichomovi. The artist was named by the mark of an antelope found on the underside of the vessel.

Soon David unwrapped some of his other mysterious goodies for me — one, a silver- handled fruit knife obtained at a flea market in Arcadia. It had the name of the owner engraved on the handle. Sure enough, David showed me a booklet entitled Silver Folding Fruit Knives he’d used to learn more about the knife! Then there was a blue and white porcelain vase called Parian ware, c.1850, bisque-like in the mode of Wedgwood. Next there was some beautiful American Art Pottery — a spongeware (may be referred to as majolica) vase with a colorful rim.

As David revealed each item to me, he explained with gusto how and where he’d acquired it.

Collecting mystery items is one thing. Collecting the reference books which identify them is another. David opened various collecting reference books he’s obtained in order to identify his finds. He pointed to one book and to a specific photograph which showed a spongeware vase identical to the one he’d bought at which we were looking. Bennington Pottery and Porcelain by Richard Carter Barret (Bonanza Books).

Clearly, David Dorsett, be they Native American rugs, pottery or jewelry — a handsome belt buckle, one of his treasures, or other American art antiques, is enjoying his lively hunt, his life-long, investigative pursuit — collecting! In fact, when I called him to check on an interview item or two, he was just coming in from an afternoon of antiquing. This time all he’d say was he’d found, “A few things.”

See what I mean? Collects eclectic mystery items!

© 2006 Rosemary Lee Potter. All Rights Reserved.
Rosemary Lee Potter is a confirmed victim of the collecting bug and can be reached by e-mail at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or write to her in care of Tropical Breeze, P.O. Box 585, Safety Harbor, FL 34695.  

PotteryBooks.nov06

 

Tropical Breeze Photo by  Rosemary Lee Potter

A sample of David Dorsett’s collecting finds and identification sources, including a bookwith pottery marks of items from the North Arizonan plateau.

 

 
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