Artist Media Series
Living Artists
Historic
$ 2,900.00
This is an unusual jar by Dextra Quostkuyva Nampeyo. She is known for her creative designs and forms that have dramatically influenced the world of Hopi-Tewa pottery. The shape is unusual with a sharp, indented shoulder near the top of the piece! Just past the shoulder there is a band that is slipped and polished red. There is an eagle wing painted on the red with bee-weed (black). This piece is from a period in Dextra’s pottery where she focused on form and simplicity of design, allowing the firing and the clay to have a voice in her clay art. The bowl was traditionally fired to create the blushes on the surface. It is from the 1980s and painted with bee-weed (black) and red clay. It is signed, “Dextra” on the bottom with a corn plant for Corn Clan. It is in excellent condition with no chips, cracks, restoration, or repair.
Dextra said of her early pottery:
“I was watching my mom (Rachel Nampeyo) all the time, and I was picking up everything she was doing. I found my own polishing stones. I would collect clays. My mother didn’t like it when I did different types of designs. She was different in her ideas. My mother, she went so far as to say that whatever our great-grandmother had reproduced from old designs—those were important designs. We’re supposed to have the basics, she’d say. The big six. Don’t part from that. The six traditional designs. One of them is the migration design, the eagle feather design, the hummingbird design, the horned lizard, the moth design, and parrots. Those are the ones that started with Lesso and Nampeyo. The designs are mainly from Sikyatki people—it was their pottery that was dug out when they were excavating. They were beautiful designs they had used quite a bit.” Dextra Quotskuyva, Spoken Through Clay
In stock