Huma, Rondina – Large Bowl Eagles and Clouds (1978)

9'w x 6.25"h

$ 1,600.00

Rondina Huma has certainly been one of the most influential Hopi potters working today.  Since her two-time “Best of Show” award at Santa Fe Indian Market, her tight style and intricately painted pottery has changed the face of contemporary Hopi pottery.   Each piece is coil built, fully stone polished and painted with native clays and bee-weed (black), and native fired.  This bowl was originally purchased from her in 1978 at her home.  The bowl is painted on the top with a cloud design.  On the sides are two sections with large eagles.  They are separated by sections with cloud and rain patterns.  The lines for the rain are thin and even.  The beginnings of her “shard” designs can certainly be seen here!  The inside of the bowl is also fully polished.  It is painted with bee-weed (black) and polished red clay areas.  It was traditionally fired which created the blushes on the surface. It is signed on the bottom, “Rondina Huma”.  It is in very good condition with no chips, cracks, restoration, or repair.  There are a few small areas of spalling.  Definitely a classic of her early work in size and design!

Rondina said of learning to make pottery:

“My mentor was Beth Sakeva. I started making pottery around 1970 after I graduated from high school. I was living on the mesa in Tewa, and Beth was my neighbor.  I learned how to coil and appreciate the thickness of the pottery. We used gourds to shape our pottery. She taught me how to sand the surface, level out the pots, and then polishing and painting. Beth initially painted my pottery but finally, she said she couldn’t do it for me anymore. She said I needed to start painting the pottery on my own. One of my cousins said, “I’ll give you one of grandma’s painting stones.” I had to learn how to clean the yucca for making the brushes. You have to get in the very center of the yucca. It’s where there is softer fiber so you can do thick or thin lines.  When I started my painting wasn’t that good. I used old designs but painted them very large. I started trying to improve and improve.

In the late 1970s Beth asked me if I wanted to go to this event called Santa Fe Indian Market.  It was when I was there that I realized
that if I was going to sell my pottery I need to do a better job so that I was selling quality artwork.  In the 1980s I improved a lot. I had started out making big pots so it was hard to make miniatures or smaller pieces. One day I was looking at my pottery and I thought it just didn’t look too good. There was so much empty space around one big design. I was thinking, “How can I do this so my pottery is more detailed? What kinds of design can I use so it fills the big open spaces?” Sometimes I’ll dream or visualize what my designs should be. If something comes to my mind at night, I’ll get up and draw it on a piece of paper immediately. I would think of what I had learned from Beth and thank the earth for giving me the opportunity to use part of nature in my pottery and thanking God for giving me talent.” Rondina Huma, Spoken Through Clay