Tahbo, Mark – 11″ Wide Jar with Swirling Hummingbirds (2005)
$ 6,000.00
WOW! This is an exceptional large jar by Mark Tahbo. He was known not just for his painted pottery but especially for the blushes on his pottery from the firing. This bowl is from 2005. The shape is elegant with sloping sides and a turned-out rim. The interior of the jar is also fully polished, which Mark would often do on larger pieces, as it is more difficult and he liked the challenge. The jar is paitned with four large hummingbirds, and each is different. They are painted with beke-weed and then highlighted with various clay slips. There is red, burgundy, mauve, and white. Separating each bird is a hummingbird tail. The entire jar is very tightly painted with a variety of designs and details. It is Mark at the peak of his career! The piece was traditionally fired with stunning blushes across the surface. Mark would create ways to create rich and deep blushes on the surface of his pieces. In the early 2000’s, Mark began experimenting with various clays that he would find around Hopi. It is signed on the bottom “M. Tahbo” and a pipe for Tobacco Clan. The bowl is in excellent condition with no chips, cracks, restoration, or repair.
Out of stock







Mark Tahbo was a Hopi-Tewa member of the Tobacco Clan. He had been an active potter since 1978. He learned to make pottery from his great-grandmother, Grace Chapella. His sisters Diana and Pam were also potters. Mark was influential in the early 1990s in recognizing Hopi pottery's traditional firing and keeping it as a practice among Hopi-Tewa.
Mark had won numerous awards for his pottery at Santa Fe Indian Market, the Heard Indian Market, and Gallup Ceremonials. In 1991, he won the Overall Prize at Santa Fe Indian Market. In 1992 he was awarded Best of Division at the Heard Museum Indian Fair. Awards continued to be presented to him in 1993 and 1994. His pottery is featured in books such as "Talking with the Clay" and "Collecting Authentic Indian Art." He is remembered as one of the exceptional traditional innovators of Hopi pottery. His pieces reflect the remarkable symmetry and thin walls of an excellent potter. The designs are painted using native clay slips and beeweed plants for the black.
Sadly, Mark passed away in December 2017. We were lucky to work with him at King Galleries for over 20 years. His creativity and artistic genius will be missed.