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| Maker(s): | Tafoya, Sara Fina, attributed to | | Culture: | Native American; American Indian; Santa Clara Pueblo (ca. 1863-1949)
| | Title: | Double shoulder jar
| | Date Made: | ca. 1900-1940
| | Type: | Container
| | Materials: | Ceramic; earthenware with burnising and slip
| | Place Made: | North America; United States; Southwest; New Mexico; Santa Clara Pueblo
| | Measurements: | Overall: 12 1/2 in x 14 in; 31.8 cm x 35.6 cm
| | Accession Number: | MH SK K.110
| | Credit Line: | Joseph Allen Skinner Museum, Mount Holyoke College
| | Museum Collection: | The Joseph Allen Skinner Museum at Mount Holyoke College
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Description: Shiny blackware pot with stylized handprints around the mouth.
Label Text: The characteristic stylized bear paw motif repeated on the neck of this jar suggests it was made by Sara Fina Tafoya at Santa Clara Pueblo, about 30 miles northwest of Santa Fe. Tafoya was one of the first living Puebloan potters to be celebrated by collectors and she helped usher in a wave of ceramic revival and creativity in the region.
Tafoya drew upon traditional methods and forms but was also innovative. Her work and success in the marketplace had a lasting effect on the future potters in her family (her daughter Margaret Tafoya’s work is to the right) and surrounding Pueblo communities. Seen alongside earlier and later vessels, Tafoya’s pot is an important bridge between the historical and contemporary.
-Aaron Miller, Associate Curator of Visual and Material Culture, Mount Holyoke College Art Museum (Sept. 2017)
Tags: pottery; indigenous people; Native American; containers; vessels Subjects: Pottery; Containers; Indians of North America; Indigenous peoples Link to share this object record: https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=MH+SK+K.110 |
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