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.
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 Museum of Fine Arts (MFA), Houston opens its first community-curated exhibition of Native American art and culture this month. Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery (20 October-12 January ...
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 ...
Discover how Maria Martinez revolutionized Pueblo pottery with her innovative black-on-black ceramics, inspired by ancient fragments and created through experimental firing techniques at San Ildefonso ...
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 ...
The 19 Indian pueblos of New Mexico, along with several in Arizona, are celebrated internationally for their distinctive, impeccably handcrafted pottery. With a storied history reaching back 2,000 ...
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 ...
Lia Picard is an Atlanta-based journalist and freelance writer specializing in food, travel, hotels, interior design, and culture. Her work has appeared in publications such as Atlanta Magazine, The ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Chadd Scott covers the intersection of art and travel. SANTA FE, NM - AUGUST 17, 2013: Noted Cochiti Pueblo (New Mexico) artist ...
JEMEZ PUEBLO, N.M. (KRQE) – A New Mexico woman has shared her craft more than 2,200 miles across the country at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “This year, we were fortunate enough to ...