Southwest pottery

Discover Pinterest’s best ideas and inspiration for Southwest pottery. Get inspired and try out new things.
2k people searched this
·
Last updated 5d
Navajo Pottery Patterns, Pueblo Pottery Patterns, Southwest Pottery Designs, Native Pottery Designs, Traditional Mexican Pottery, Southwestern Pottery, Historical Pottery, Western Pottery, Navajo Pottery

This rare Tesuque Pueblo pottery dough bowl dates from the mid- to late-nineteenth century, probably circa 1870s. It has design elements in black on a white slip without any red in the design, but the rim is red. The only other red is the traditional wiped-on red band below the design panel.

944
African pottery is a diverse and rich tradition of crafting functional and decorative ceramics across the African continent. It varies greatly in terms of style, technique, and purpose, reflecting the cultural diversity of Africa's numerous ethnic groups. These pottery pieces often feature intricate designs, patterns, and symbols that carry cultural and spiritual significance. Southwest Indian Art, Khavda Pottery, Indian Ceramics, African Pottery, Southwest Pottery, Native Pottery, Africa Art Design, American Indian Pottery, African Inspired Decor

African pottery is a diverse and rich tradition of crafting functional and decorative ceramics across the African continent. It varies greatly in terms of style, technique, and purpose, reflecting the cultural diversity of Africa's numerous ethnic groups. These pottery pieces often feature intricate designs, patterns, and symbols that carry cultural and spiritual significance.

352
To touch the past: The painted pottery of the Mimbres people at the Weisman Art Museum, University of Minnesota | Semantic Scholar Weisman Art Museum, Indian Ceramics, Impossible Shapes, Southern New Mexico, Southwest Pottery, Jewelry Ceramic, American Indian Pottery, Pottery Jewelry, American Ceramics

The Weisman Art Museum holds a large collection of Mimbres painted pottery (1000 to 1150), resulting from an excavation in Southern New Mexico by university faculty and students from 1929 to 1931. Pottery, jewelry, ceramic miniatures, animal bone awls, and other tools were transferred from the Department of Anthropology in 1992. Today, no one in anthropology studies this collection. And, in the decades since the excavation, both the science of archaeology and perceptions about Native…

7

Related interests