Developed in partnership with the School for Advanced Research and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the exhibition features more than 100 historic and contemporary works of Native American pottery. NEW ...
Museum of Indian Arts and Culture/Laboratory of Anthropology (Museum of New Mexico) Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.),.) Catalog of an exhibition curated by the Pueblo Pottery Collective and ...
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 ...
The modern art of the 20th Century didn’t arrive fully formed without antecedents. In the case of the Art Deco movement of the 1920s, the style drew on the geometry, sleekness and minimalism of ...
The Pottery of Acoma Pueblo, fourth in a series of books about Pueblo ceramics by Dwight P. Lanmon and Francis H. Harlow, is a remarkable record in text, photographs, and diagrams. There is such range ...
Alan Cameros and his late wife, Nancy, started building their Southwestern pottery collection innocently enough: They were on a trip to Santa Fe, N.M., to scout a convention site and bought a "pretty ...
Harlan Reano’s introduction to Pueblo pottery-making didn’t come from his relatives at Santo Domingo Pueblo but from his sweetheart, Lisa Holt. Reano’s own family is involved with jewelry design.
SANTA FE, N.M. — The words astonished me when I read them: “Pueblo people believe clay has life. Potters speak to it, pray to it, revere it.” My wife, Sandy, and I have been modest collectors of ...
When Sonia and Victor Bauer downsized their residence after retirement, they sought a worthy new home for their beloved collection of contemporary Native American pottery. The Morris Museum became the ...
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 ...
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.
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