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Ceramics of Indigenous peoples of the Americas is an art form with at least a 7500-year history in the Americas. [1] Pottery is fired ceramics with clay as a component. Ceramics are used for utilitarian cooking vessels, serving and storage vessels, pipes, funerary urns, censers , musical instruments, ceremonial items, masks, toys, sculptures ...
Ancestral Pueblo, Flagstaff black on white double jar, AD 1100–1200. Pueblo pottery are ceramic objects made by the Indigenous Pueblo people and their antecedents, the Ancestral Puebloans and Mogollon cultures in the Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico. [1]
A pipestem from the upper Missouri River area, without the pipe bowl, from the collection of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology. A ceremonial pipe is a particular type of smoking pipe, used by a number of cultures of the indigenous peoples of the Americas in their sacred ceremonies. Traditionally they are used to offer prayers in a ...
Artist Rose B. Simpson works in her studio in Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico. Simpson's work is highlighted in the Norton Museum of Art's "Journeys of Clay" exhibition, which also includes works ...
Sarah Biscarra-Dilley, Northern Chumash. Raven Chacon, Navajo Nation, (born 1977) Corwin Clairmont, Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Nation. Gerald Clarke, Cahuilla. Joe Feddersen, Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation ( Okanagan) (born 1953) Nicholas Galanin, Tlingit / Unangax.
Mississippian culture pottery. Mississippian culture pottery is the ceramic tradition of the Mississippian culture (800 to 1600 CE) found as artifacts in archaeological sites in the American Midwest and Southeast. It is often characterized by the adoption and use of riverine (or more rarely marine) shell- tempering agents in the clay paste. [ 1]
Huichol art. Huichol art broadly groups the most traditional and most recent innovations in the folk art and handcrafts produced by the Huichol people, who live in the states of Jalisco, Durango, Zacatecas and Nayarit in Mexico. The unifying factor of the work is the colorful decoration using symbols and designs which date back centuries.
Black-on-black ware pot by María Martinez of San Ildefonso Pueblo, circa 1945. Collection deYoung Museum. Black-on-black ware is a 20th and 21st-century pottery tradition developed by Puebloan Native American ceramic artists in Northern New Mexico. Traditional reduction-fired blackware has been made for centuries by Pueblo artists and other ...