Pavatea, Garnet – 11″ Wide Red Courrugated Bowl (1970s)

11.5"w x 4"h

$ 1,600.00

Garnet Pavatea is one of the great names in Hopi-Tewa pottery.  She created traditional Hopi pottery but was most famous for her corrugated pieces.  This bowl is a spectacular example of her corrugated style.  The bowl has triangular corrugation around the top.  There are ten rows of corrugation.  There’s a great story about how she created the triangular style of corrugation on her pottery.  She used a key-style can opener with a triangular end, which she would impress into the clay to create the design. The idea of the corrugation on the surface comes from pre-historic pottery which was corrugated or created leaving the coils exposed.  One explanation of why they were made this way is that they heated up faster when used for cooking.   This bowl is fully polished on the inside and outside.  This bowl was made from red Hopi clay, which gives it a distinctive color.  It is signed on the bottom “Garnet Pavatea” and it is in very good condition with no chips, cracks, restoration, or repair.  It’s not often we see her corrugated pieces in such a large size!