Pueblo pots are not functional things. They are not aesthetic things. They are not one thing or another. They are everything. Container. Pitcher. Artwork. Gift. Teacher. Relative. Ancestor. Nothing in ...
At the St. Paul, Minnesota, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW, a man brought in a pair of exquisite black pots that his mother was given as gifts in 1957 while she was on a road trip in New Mexico with her family.
July 13 (UPI) --The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City will open an exhibit Friday of Pueblo Indian pottery in what the institution described as its first community-curated exhibit of Native ...
QUESTION: I bought these in 1945 when I got out of the Air Corps in Albuquerque, N.M., at an Indian store on Central Avenue called “Mazel’s” I think. The black one is 12 ½” wide and the red ones are 7 ...
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Native American voices and artistry are at the core of a new traveling exhibition of clay pottery from the Pueblo Indian region of the American Southwest, as major art ...
It all starts with the earth, or earthen clay, the tangible substance of Pueblo pottery. But that clay needs water in order to mix, and then fire to harden the pottery. Then the breath of the wind ...
Pottery is both personal and communal, utilitarian and ceremonial, at the heart of civilization and family life. We need pots to carry water, prepare food and store perishables. But pots are as ...
Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. For hundreds of years, the native inhabitants of the American Southwest have ...
Email notifications are only sent once a day, and only if there are new matching items. Long before there were famous Pueblo potters like Maria Martinez (San Ildefonso) and Lucy Lewis (Acoma), there ...
A reverence for tradition, hundreds of years in the making, is reflected in a Native American pottery exhibition that is a first of its kind for the Bellarmine Museum of Art at Fairfield University.
Preface -- The Seattle and Bremerton years -- My time in the army -- The university years -- Family and homes -- The Los Alamos National Laboratory -- Fossils -- Motorcycles -- The Pueblo Indians of ...