Ceramics: Selections from the Otto C. Lightner Collection

“This is the new Museum of Hobbies which will be unlike anything in the world… In the china room there will be cabinets containing a collection of various types such as Wedgwood, Staffordshire, Meissen, Majolica, Sevres…”

– Otto C. Lightner on his first museum in Chicago, Hobbies Magazine, July 1934

From delicate Meissen figurines to vividly colored European majolica, ceramics in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were far more than just decorative objects. A Kangxi vase, an English Staffordshire figurine, or a mass-produced American transferware plate each traversed complex networks of makers, dealers, collectors, and consumers. In doing so, these objects helped shape the social, economic, and intellectual currents of their time.

This exhibition presents a selection of ceramics from the collection of museum founder Otto C. Lightner, whose passion for collecting embraced both the refined and the everyday. The presentation reflects Lightner’s conviction that collecting was not merely an academic pursuit, but a deeply rewarding hobby—one that fostered creativity, intellectual growth, and a sense of well-being through beauty, variety, and the pleasure of comparison.

About the Lightner Museum Collection

Established in St. Augustine in 1948, the Lightner Museum has its roots in the hobby boom that swept the United States in the early twentieth century. One of the movement’s most influential champions was Otto C. Lightner (1886–1950), publisher of Hobbies magazine. While Lightner promoted all forms of collecting, he possessed the means to assemble an extensive personal collection of fine and decorative arts, natural history specimens, and Americana. Exhibiting both his own holdings and collections submitted by readers of Hobbies magazine, Lightner’s museum reflected the breadth of American hobby culture. Lightner called his museum a “collection of collections,” a phrase that captured its scope and guiding philosophy.

Support for the exhibition comes from the St. Johns Cultural Council and the St. Johns County Tourist Development Council; the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Arts and Culture; the Florida Council on Arts and Culture; and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Opens August 14

Category: Exhibitions,Upcoming

Amphora Factory (Austrian, 1892–1945)
Ewer, c. 1900
Earthenware

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