Lucas, Steve – “Dextra’s Birds” Jar

9.5"w x 6"h

$ 3,200.00

This is a multi-color new jar by Steve Lucas.  He is one of the leading Hopi-Tewa potters working today.  Each piece is coil built, stone polished, painted with native clay slips and bee-weed (black), and traditionally fired.  Steve has won “Best of Show” at Santa Fe Indian Market and his work remains some of the most refined and creative. The jar has a sloping base to flat sides and sloping again to the rim. The design on the top of the jar was inspired by the work of Steve’s aunt, Dextra Quotskuyva. The birds are painted with thin lines and curve and swirl across the surface.  Note the very thin lines painted in the birds!  The tail feathers are polished red.  Around the shoulder is a star pattern.  The bowl was made with two different clays so there is an interesting color variation in the clay near the rim.  That seems appropriate as Dextra was one of the great innovators in Hopi-Tewa pottery and seeing innovative aspects in this jar seems equally appropriate.  This jar is traditionally fired so there are exceptional blushes on the surface.  The last photo is of Steve holding the piece.  The bowl is signed on the bottom in the clay, “S. Lucas” and a mudhead (koyemsi) and an ear of corn (corn clan).

Steve said of the deep red clay slip he uses on his pottery:

“When I first learned to make pottery, the red slip painted in the designs was difficult to work with. It wouldn’t take heat very well and would scorch and turn black. The red was also difficult to polish. My aunt Dextra had a deep red color clay slip and I decided to experiment with it. I took some of our base clay and added the red to it and it polished very well. I then decided to put some mica in there to get that sparkle. That’s where the new red came from, and Dextra liked how it turned out. I introduced them to that. It was nice that for my teacher, Dextra, I was able to share and teach her something.”  Steve Lucas, Spoken Through Clay