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Pottery runs deep in Santa Fe, from hallowed Pueblo collections to clay-throwing pubs. Sitting behind a potter’s wheel in ...
Its immense collection of Pueblo pottery, dating to 1050-1300, is the backbone of “Grounded in Clay,” which had its debut at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture in Santa Fe last summer.
Critical to understanding and appreciating Pueblo pottery is its manufacture. ... 1887-1980), best known for her striking black pottery found in museum collections around the world.
The exhibition “Grounded in Clay”, opening this month at the MFA Houston, was co-curated by the more than 60 members of the Pueblo Pottery Collective ...
Pueblo people share how pottery is a powerful element at the heart of their cultures. Drawing upon outstanding collections of historic Pueblo pottery, in this documentary Pueblo people share ...
WATERVILLE, Maine — An electric-eyed Pueblo warrior wraps the stairwell at the Colby College Museum of Art in stark black and white, his gaze burning, or so it feels, right into your soul.
Native American artists, political leaders and storytellers are the final arbiters of taste and style for a traveling exhibition of pottery from the Pueblo Indian region of the Southwestern U.S.
PPC members, primarily potters, each selected and wrote personal catalog entries about one or two of the show’s approximately 115 works of Southwestern pottery, on loan from the collections of ...
Those works are housed in the expansive Lunder Collection at the museum. But the curators decided this exhibition should focus not on those artists but rather on the perspectives of Pueblo people.
Pueblo Pottery Collective members: Dr. Joseph Aguilar -- Albert Alvidrez -- Loren Aragon (Acoma Pueblo) -- Jade Begay (Tay tsu'geh Oweenge/Tesuque ... as well as writers, curators and community ...