Howard Kottler papers

ArchivalResource

Howard Kottler papers

1907-2006

The Howard Kottler papers measure 11.6 linear feet and 0.014 GB and date from circa 1907-2006. Included are biographical materials consisting of copies of Kottler's biography, curriculum vitae, a 1948 year book from Cleveland Heights High School, diplomas and awards, and a 1988 calendar with notations by Kottler; correspondence with friends, family, and associates, including Arna Goffe, Gwen-Li Goo, Lauren Grossman, Judith Schwartz, Patti Warashina and others; writings including Kottler's doctoral dissertation, "An Exhibition of Pottery in Support of Three Processes in Ceramics"; artist, institutional, and teaching files consisting of the University of Washington, the Tacoma Art Museum, the Watershed Center for Ceramic Arts, and the Garth Clark Gallery as well as inventory lists, sales records, banking records, digital documents and correspondence relating to the establishment and business conduct of the Howard Kottler Charitable Trust; photographs, digital photographs, slides and negatives of Kottler and his work; audiovisual material including 27 audio cassettes of interviews with Kottler, circa 1988-1989, by Patricia Failing who wrote the book "Howard Kottler: Face to Face", Univ. of Washington, 1995, 35 mm reel stills of Kottler's "American Gothic", 1/4 in. sound recording labeled Exp 1 first; and few unidentified beta, VHS and cassette tapes; and printed material consisting of comic books, newspaper clippings, exhibition announcements, catalogs, posters and craft periodicals featuring Kottler.

11.6 Linear feet; 0.014 Gigabytes

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 8325228

Archives of American Art

Related Entities

There are 2 Entities related to this resource.

University of Washington

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w66f6kz1 (corporateBody)

Kottler, Howard, 1930-1989

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6sb73gk (person)

Ceramicist; Seattle, Wash. Kottler spent the majority of his career teaching at the University of Washington. His work was inspired by popular cultural themes such as cartoons and comic books, but speak widely to a range of art historical topics, as well as philosophical ideas about the self and the world. From the description of Howard Kottler papers, 1925-1999. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 84653638 ...