Pueblo Indian Pottery
Transcription
Pueblo Indian Pottery
Pueblo Indian Pottery 1 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Connect with creative insights, techniques and supplies in the wonderful world of ceramics and pottery. HOME CONTACT PRIVACY T&C January 23, 2012 Recent Posts Parisian Street Markets Pottery Groove Journey of the Rubens vase Figurines of intrigue Jun Kaneko Ceramic wall art, panels and plaques Bemboka Gallery – Australian pottery Pottery whimsical clay sphere moments Charles Catteau – Art Deco ceramics master Clayart elegance Terri Smart – riding the waves Hearts of clay Retro pottery yeah ! Clay figurine artists from Abramtsevo The Okinawan Clayart Bio Chi Ceramics in black and white Tim Christensen – fine drawings on porcelain pottery Collecting Cookie and Biscuit jars A high priestess in mosaic art – Irinia Charny Karen Cordova - The Clay Artists at St. Kates Art Fair The spirals, swirls, scrolls and waves of Carol Long’s pottery. 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 2 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Art, paintings and pottery Ceramic alchemicist Josh De Weese Geometric pottery styles Pottery Art Of The Day continued Seeing red ceramic decor designs Pottery Art of the day Yoga merged with clayart Vessels of the aromatic Pablo Picasso Ceramics: The Madoura Collection Charmaine Haines – South African clayart Australian Sabbia Gallery for ceramic and glass artists. The flair of Royal Haeger Google Oracle meets the pottery Void Back with Deco Gallery in Forest Pat Swyler Ceramics Sublime Jugs, pitchers and 2 coffee pots Korean Ceramic Arts, traditional meets contemporary The End of History’s dazzling displays Peruvian Pottery Karen Cordova, Myrtle Cata of San Felipe and San Juan Pueblos. Micaceous Clay Pottery Pottery Whimsical 1 The magnificence of Rene Lalique Japanese Contemporary Pottery Greenware and Impressionism Karen’s pots are hand coiled, traditionally pit fired, and built from clay gathered from historic clay pits where native peoples have gathered clays for hundreds of Helene Fielder Sculptural Art years. This style of pottery is indigenous to Taos and Picuris Pueblos. The clay is The Soluble Salt Ceramics of Mark Goudy and Liza Riddle gathered in the summertime and the naturally present mica in the clay gives the Clay Body Art pottery its beautiful glimmer.The figurative clayart sculptures It can take two weeks to three months for each piece to be completed. The clay, in its natural environment, is dry like and dirt, but the experienced clay gatherer French Art Pottery knows it on sight. The clay is soaked and strained before it can be worked. It is Thanakupi : Indigienous Australian ceramic artist. then coiled into shape. While it is drying designs may be etched into the clay. The Michael Sherrill, NC ceramicist pottery is then left in a dark room to slowly dry before firing. Pottery throwing with Hsin-Chuen Lin Pots are fired in an open pit where they are placed on a grate. Then dry bark is built into a teepee formation around the pots and it is ignited from beneath. After Recommended two hours of being in the fire the pots are left to sit for another hour before the process is completed and the pottery is finished. the mosaic mystique ( http://www.pueblopotteryme.com ) Italian Maolica Renaissance Ceramics Martha Daniels - Ceramic Sculpture Background to Pueblo Pottery : Hispanic, Native and Anglo pottery wizard master pottery extruder. Americans in New Mexico have made Aritayaki porcelin use of the market for ethnic art to Ceramic artist Matthew Hyleck express their artistic, religious and Susan Musi Claywork economic values. Spaniards arrived in the region by 1540 and Google Oracle meets the pottery Void V & A Museum Ceramic Galleries 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 3 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ encountered both hostile and helpful refurbish Pueblo Indians. One remarkable The Italian Pottery studio of Mirta Morigi thing about the interactions between these cultures is that each has been able to preserve much of its unique Special Recent Posts character. After 1800, Anglo American culture added a third element to daily life in New Mexico. Hispanics and American Indians living along New Mexico’s Rio Grande Valley between Santa Fe and Taos have retained much of their culture, as reflected in such crafts as Parisian Street Markets pottery, weaving, jewelry, and images. The Hispanics who settled in the mountainside village of Chimayó displaced the Indians after 1700, and are famous for their zig-zag and diamond woven designs. Pottery Groove After 1848, when much of Mexico became American territory, Anglo investors and promoters discovered and exploited the cultural practices and products of New Mexico’s Hispanics and Pueblo Indians. In turn, both groups sought ways to convert the tourism trade to their own benefits. While relying on the tourism market for income, many contemporary New Mexican artists use their work as a way of reaffirming old cultural values. Black, polished and carved pottery by Indians at Santa Clara Pueblo is still done by families, but also as individuals as a Journey of the Rubens vase means of individual self expression. By the 1920s, Pueblo potters experimented with forms and glazes, including the famous black-on-black finish developed by Maria Martinez of San Ildefonso Pueblo, who became the best known of all Indian potters among collectors. Figurines of intrigue Blue Corn (Crucita Gonzales Calabaza) Jun Kaneko Ceramic wall art, panels and plaques Bemboka Gallery - Australian pottery Blue Corn (Crucita Gonzales Calabaza) (1921-1999) – San Ildefonso Black on Black Geometric Bowl. Medicine Man Gallery. Pottery whimsical clay sphere moments Santo Domingo Pueblo : Mark Wayne Garcia Charles Catteau Art Deco ceramics master 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 4 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Clayart elegance Terri Smart riding the waves Hearts of clay Retro pottery yeah ! Clay figurine artists from Abramtsevo The Okinawan Clayart Bio Chi Ceramics in black and white Tim Christensen fine drawings on porcelain pottery Mark has been an active Santo Domingo Pueblo potter since the 1990s working with black-on-red jars, dough bowls and canteens and most recently in micaceous Collecting Cookie and Biscuit jars pottery with black. http://www.pueblopotteryme.com Robert Tenorio – A high priestess in mosaic art Irinia Charny 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 5 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ The Clay Artists at St. Kates Art Fair The spirals, swirls, scrolls and waves of Carol Long's pottery. Art, paintings and pottery Ceramic alchemicist Josh De Weese Canteen with stylized bird and corn design ( Medicine Man Gallery ) Santa Clara Peublo: Geometric pottery styles Santanita Suazo - Pottery Art Of The Day continued Seeing red ceramic decor designs Pottery Art of the day Yoga merged with clayart Black on Black Jar by Santanita Suazo http://www.medicinemangallery.com 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 6 of 16 Susan Folwell — http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Her innovative work was initially inspired by her mother, Jody Folwell, who broke many of the traditional conventions in the 1970′s. The jar below is slipped with a blue underglaze and then painted with birds and Vessels of the aromatic branches. The classic shape speaks well with the use of the birds and tree branches as they encircle the jar. The birds here are honeyguides or “honey birds which eat both the wax around the honey and the bee larvae. ( King Galleries ) Pablo Picasso Ceramics: The Madoura Collection Charmaine Haines - South African clayart Australian Sabbia Gallery for ceramic and glass artists. The flair of Royal Haeger Google Oracle meets the pottery Void Back with Deco Acoma Pueblo Sandra M Victorino : Sandra is one of today’s most highly collected potters along with her aunt and teacher, the famous Dorothy Torivio. She has won awards at the Santa Fe Indian Market. Gallery in Forest Pat Swyler Ceramics Sublime Jugs, pitchers and 2 coffee pots 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 7 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Korean Ceramic Arts, traditional meets contemporary The End of History's dazzling displays . Monroe Victorino : Monroe has been an active potter since 1976 working with fineline polychrome bowls and jars. Monroe is well-known for his superb fineline Peruvian Pottery work, wonderful star bursts a exemplified in the wedding vase below. Pottery Whimsical 1 The magnificence of Rene Lalique Japanese Contemporary Pottery Greenware and Impressionism Helene Fielder Sculptural Art Queaustea – Josephine Foard, an arts and crafts do-gooder at the beginning of the twentieth century, thought that a larger market would develop for Pueblo pottery if the objects were glazed to be water tight. She bought fine works like this Acoma jar by Queaustea, glazed it and sold it. However, the idea was never an economic success, and Pueblo pottery remains unglazed today. The Soluble Salt Ceramics of Mark Goudy and Liza Riddle Clay Body Art 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 8 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ figurative clayart sculptures French Art Pottery Acoma Jar, 1900-1905 ( New Mexico Museum of Art ) Zuni Peublo : Priscilla Peynesta Thanakupi : Indigienous Australian ceramic artist. Michael Sherrill, NC ceramicist Pottery throwing with Hsin-Chuen Lin the mosaic mystique A lizard rises over a repeating deer design. (www..pueblopottery.net ) Ceramic artist Matthew Hyleck Carlos Latte — Carlos learned pottery making from his step-grandmother, Daisy Hooee, by observing and listening to his grandmother and what she had to say about pottery making. It was the same way with his aunt Jennie Laate. Carlos has been making pottery since 1989, and his technique continues to improve. His design elements cover all the traditional motifs: deer house, rosettes, rain birds, lines, curves, and geometrics. Pottery of Morocco Susan Musi Claywork The Ceramic Furniture of Hun-Chung Lee Santa Clara Peublo : 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 9 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Tina Garcia ( 1957-2005 ) Tag cloud wood fired kiln Stoneware ceramic figurines cuerda seca glazing Nepheline glaze Maria Martinez Unfold Lab modern design Tripodic Goblet fritware. De Morgan dancing vase lead glazed face painting Met Museum Platter ceramic figures Impressionistic traditional glazing Charmaine Haines Pottery Postmodernism Greek Art Masks Christopher Dresser Feng Shui Contemporary Ceramics Euro Clement Massier Fireplace Italian craftsman Raku Australian artists Korean-pottery ceramic sculpturs Mid-century pottery Umbrian Renaissance pilgrim flask Mingei genre China crystalline glaze White Corn Mosaic Haeger Moscow Stig Lindberg Josh Pearson Charaka Samhita Persia Archival The color of this traditional redware fluted pot is difficult to elaborate. It is not so much the pigment as the color saturation and the pristine gloss . Vessels like Ardmore African Ceramic Artists this classic shape with uninterrupted surfaces are harder to polish. Etched, carved, and shaped design elements provide natural break in finish—unadorned surfaces require uniform finish. Marta Oritz Peublo : Shoshona Snow Ceramics Juan Quezada Mata Ortiz pottery is also known as Casa Grandes pottery as the pueblo is located along a tributary of the Rio Casas Grandes, a fertile valley which has long been inhabited by indigenous people. Pottery from this pueblo has seen a revival lead Creasing and Fluting pottery by the effort of Juan Quezada, a self taught potter of the modern Mata Ortiz style whose skills have attracted clay workers from the region, extended family and neighbors to create the distinctive pottery shapes and designs which define the pottery from this region. Many of the designs incorporate mimbres symbolism from Native American culture. Mata Ortiz pottery has become high collectible . His Clay Art ... the Pinnacle Desert. Sebastian Moh, Malaysian inspired pottery. 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 10 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Fine Bone China Ceramic Maskwoman aka Peggy Bjerkan Simcha Even-Chen Ceramic Sculptures. Peter Karner Pottery Jemez Peublo : Emma Yepa – Emma is of the Jemez Pueblo Coyote Clan began potting at he Ceramic Animal Art age of 13 in 1965 working with stone polished redware, tanware, some incised work and melon swirl pots. She was taught by her mother Ida Yepa. It is only in the past two years however, that Emma has begun to do swirled melon pots. D.Michael Coffey..Colorado Ceramic Artist Gustavo Perez Mexican ceramicist. Satsuma Ware Here come the claybots (automated pottery) Archives Verda Toledo – November 2012 (5) October 2012 (5) September 2012 (7) 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 11 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ August 2012 (5) July 2012 (8) June 2012 (8) May 2012 (7) April 2012 (8) March 2012 (5) February 2012 (5) January 2012 (3) December 2011 (4) November 2011 (3) October 2011 (3) September 2011 (3) August 2011 (4) July 2011 (3) June 2011 (3) May 2011 (2) Hopi Peublo : Nathan Begaye ( 1958 – 2010 ) Nathan Begaye was an unique innovator among March 2011 (1) January 2011 (2) Pueblo and Navajo potters. His work used traditional designs, forms and December 2010 (1) techniques, yet somehow appeared very modern. His ethnic connection to both October 2010 (2) Hopi and Navajo let his work flow between the two distinctive styles and yet find September 2010 (1) their own unique space. Here are two classic pieces of his pottery. ( http://www.kinggalleries.com ) August 2010 (1) July 2010 (1) June 2010 (2) May 2010 (5) April 2010 (7) March 2010 (4) February 2010 (4) January 2010 (3) December 2009 (1) November 2009 (1) October 2009 (1) August 2009 (1) July 2009 (1) May 2009 (1) April 2009 (1) March 2009 (1) December 2008 (1) September 2008 (1) Rainy Naha-Hopi Tewa – Rainy Naha creates beautifully coiled pottery which is thin walled and traditionally fired. The white color is a white clay slip which is polished onto the surface of the clay. Her designs are all painted using natural clay slips for the various colors, or bee-weed (a plant) for the black. On the seedpot below is her classic solstice pattern. In the sections near the opening are the various phases of the moon. In the smaller panels below the moons are cloud, rain and traditional Hopi designs from both pottery and katsinas. August 2008 (1) Categories Ceramics Creative Ongoing post updates Pottery Techniques 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 12 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ About Me I’ve always been intrigued by form and texture. My channels of creativity have primarily been through music and photography ( professional ) For a long time I have also admired pottery and ceramics for the richness of colors that are possible with this art form and the sense of balance conveyed by their symmetrical shape.Apart from the occasional dabbling in clay, I am also an avid collector. Here I wish to present some communication and inspiration for those who produce, promote and just plain adore this art medium like I do. INDEX Archie Bray Foundation Ardmore Art Deco Bitossi Peggy Bjerkan Royal Bonn Juliet Blackman Van Briggle Clarice Cliff D.Michael Coffey Newcombe College John Cook Paul Dachsel Pierre-Adrien Dalpayrat Martha Daniels Emile Decoeur Auguste Delaherche Theodore Deck Denbac Christopher Dresser Sue Dunne The jar below has her “tumbling parrot” design. There are five parrots, which are interconnected and “tumbling” around the jar. Why parrots? They are one of the clans at Hopi and are typically seen in katsina form and their feathers are often used in the ceremonies. Rainy learned to make pottery from her mother, Helen (Featherwoman) Naha. Rainy continues to innovate and also create her own voice among Hopi-Tewa potters. ( King Galleries ) Upsala-Ekeby Phil Elson Laurie Erdman Simcha Even-Chen Buddahbuilder – Anita Feng Feng Shui Helene Fielder Boch Freres David Fry Puls Gallery Sabbia Gallery Grueby 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 13 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Roger Guerin Gustavsberg Charmaine Haines Joan Hardie Anne Harworth David Hendley Lee Kang Hyo Matthew Hyleck Lee Soo-Jong Rene Lalique Peter Karner Hun Chun Lee Matsui Kosei Carol Long Ichino Masahiko Clement Massier Gillian McMillan Meisenthall Jeff Mincham Carol Metcalfe Met Museum Sebastian Moh Mirta Morigi Montieres Mougin Moorcroft Murano Newark Museum Susan Musi Gunnar Nyland Josh Pehrson Pablo Picasso Earth Song is a carved and painted gourd done in the style of ancient Pueblo Pierrefonds pottery. George Ohr Kaia Thomas Gustavo Perez Rambervillers Per Rehfeldt Mark Goudy,Liza Riddle David Roberts Jane Ridgeway Ronbo Roseville Royal Copenhagen Sarreguemines Saxbo Lidia Serra Shanghai Museum Michael Sherrill Sylvac 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 14 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Sevres Shoshona Snow Willem Stuurman Pat Swyler Gates Potteries (TECO) Hamada Tomoo Thanakupi V & A Museum Wallakra Bowl with Birds – Jody Folwel Josh De Weese Russel Wright Zsolnay Les Ateliers Gallery in Belgium Manhattan Ceramic Store “The end of history “ Shauna Rustin Acoma via Andrea Fisher Pottery 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 15 of 16 http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Shauna Rustin Acoma 1K+ Tweet 4 Like 1 0 Share More posts: 11/17/2012 1:35 PM Pueblo Indian Pottery 16 of 16 Pottery Pieces from Antiquity http://www.veniceclayartists.com/pueblo-indian-pottery/ Peter Karner Pottery Pottery markets Related posts: 1. pottery wizard master pottery extruder. 2. Pottery in the subcontinent 3. Pottery Art Of The Day continued Tags: Acoma Jar, Mata Ortiz, Seedpot, Wedding Vase Post a Comment or Leave a Trackback Post a Comment Your email is never published nor shared. Name Email Website Comment Post Comment © 2012 Ceramics and Pottery Arts and Resources. All rights reserved. Theme by Geek with Laptop 11/17/2012 1:35 PM