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Each Friday, our media roundtable dives into the biggest stories of the week. Among our topics this week:
Guests:
And, a local artist who would eventually win international acclaim for his raku-style pottery spent most of his life as an accountant in Mandarin. Charlie Moses Brown didn't turn his full attention to pottery until he was 58, in 1962, when he began harvesting his own clay from riverbanks in Green Cove Springs. Brown did all of his work by hand, eschewing the traditional wheel, creating everything from pots to jewelry. He even designed ornaments for Vice President Walter Mondale’s Christmas tree. An exhibit of his work, When the Kiln is Opened: The Art of Charlie Moses Brown, is on display at Mandarin Museum through March 21.
Guest: Brittany Cohill, executive director of the Mandarin Museum & Historical Society
By WJCT News4.5
3434 ratings
Each Friday, our media roundtable dives into the biggest stories of the week. Among our topics this week:
Guests:
And, a local artist who would eventually win international acclaim for his raku-style pottery spent most of his life as an accountant in Mandarin. Charlie Moses Brown didn't turn his full attention to pottery until he was 58, in 1962, when he began harvesting his own clay from riverbanks in Green Cove Springs. Brown did all of his work by hand, eschewing the traditional wheel, creating everything from pots to jewelry. He even designed ornaments for Vice President Walter Mondale’s Christmas tree. An exhibit of his work, When the Kiln is Opened: The Art of Charlie Moses Brown, is on display at Mandarin Museum through March 21.
Guest: Brittany Cohill, executive director of the Mandarin Museum & Historical Society

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