Nampeyo, Fannie – 11″ Wide 18 Bird Wing Migration Pattern Jar (1960’s)

11"w x 6.5"h

$ 4,400.00

This is a classic large round-shoulder jar by Fannie Nampeyo. She was the youngest daughter of noted potter Nampeyo of Hano and also the mother of noted potters Iris Nampeyo, Leah Nampeyo, and Thomas Polacca.  She was certainly among the most skilled of her generation for painting designs on pottery.  While her mother revived the “migration” or bird wing design, Fannie made it a signature design of her pottery and the Nampeyo family.  This jar has a very wide, round shoulder.  It is the migration pattern that dominates the surface of this piece.  The migration pattern, or bird wings, extends around the entire jar in 9 sections on top and 9 on the bottom for a total of 18.  The jar was traditionally fired so that it has some visually striking blushes on the surface. In-person, the coloration on the surface is stunning!  It is signed on the bottom, “Fannie Nampeyo” in the style of her signature in the 1960s.   It is in very good condition with no chips, cracks, restoration, or repair.  The original “$150” price is on the bottom in pencil.

Dextra Quotskuyva Nampeyo said of  the migration pattern:

“This is the one design that was really stressed for us to use, the migration pattern. Nothing but lines, representing the migration of all the people to all the places, including down below and up above. All the x’s represent life from the bottom and top, telling you the universe is one. The thin lines, I just wanted to paint them real fast and real close to try and include everyone.”  Dextra Quotskuyva Nampeyo, Spoken Through Clay

In stock