House of Folk Art

Episode 29 | Face Jugs and Folk Legends: Inside the Catawba Valley Pottery Festival


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In this episode of House of Folk Art, Matt Ledbetter takes listeners deep inside the Catawba Valley Pottery Festival. One of the South’s most important gatherings for traditional folk pottery. Held each spring in Hickory, NC, the festival brings together potters, collectors, and first-time admirers from across the country. 

Featured Guests:
Steve Abee | Stacy Lambert | Michael Gates
LA Ryan | Dr. Allen Huffman

🎧 CHAPTERS
00:00 – Welcome to the Festival
04:30 – Steve Abee on Clay, Community, and Tradition
10:10 – Early Bird Setup and Pottery Prep
15:05 – Stacy Lambert on Pop Culture and James Earl Jones
20:40 – Pottery Signatures and Collector’s Stories
26:10 – Michael Gates on Legacy and Voice
31:30 – Kilns, Breaks, and Evolving Style
36:50 – LA Ryan and the Gospel of Howard Smith
42:15 – Dr. Allen Huffman on the Festival’s Origins
47:50 – Storytelling and Preserving History
53:00 – Auctions, New Collectors, and Final Thoughts
58:40 – Wrapping Up in Hickory

Recording live from inside the festival, Matt captures the heart of the event through conversations with the people who’ve shaped and preserved this tradition. He sits down with veteran potter Steve Abee, who shares his process of digging clay by hand and firing it in wood-burning kilns. Stacy Lambert reflects on his whimsical, hand-painted jugs, including a special commission for James Earl Jones. Michael Gates speaks as a descendant of the Reinhardt family, balancing legacy and personal voice. Collector LA Ryan talks about traveling with Howard Smith to document forgotten potters. And Dr. Allen Huffman, founder of the festival, shares stories from the early days and explains how Catawba Valley pottery became nationally recognized.

Themes emerge throughout: the physical labor behind every piece, the emotional stories pottery can hold, and the challenge of keeping these traditions alive. From kiln accidents and auction surprises to face jugs and firing rituals, the episode is full of insights, humor, and history.

Whether you’re a longtime collector or just discovering folk art, this episode offers a rich look into a community where stories are passed down in clay. It’s a tribute not just to handmade objects, but to the hands that shape them—and the meaning they carry.

This episode captures what makes the Catawba Valley Pottery Festival so unique. It’s not just the pottery, although the craftsmanship—hand-dug clay, hand-turned jugs, and glazes mixed by instinct—is remarkable. It’s the people behind it: the artists who carry tradition forward, the collectors who recognize a jug from a hundred feet away, and the families passing stories from one generation to the next.

At its core, the festival is a living conversation between past and present. An open-air museum. A reunion. A marketplace. A legacy. It reminds us that folk art still matters—not because it’s perfect, but because it’s deeply human. Imperfect in the best way. Shaped by hand, memory, and soul.

As long as the kilns burn, the clay holds, and the stories are told, the spirit of Catawba Valley folk pottery will live on.

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House of Folk ArtBy Matt Ledbetter