RM2MTYX80–A pair of Acoma Indian pottery bowls, made by a potter in the 1970 at Acoma Indian Pueblo in New Mexico.
RFKEHF23–Clay mask in art studio
RMAN2592–Albuquerque New Mexico,Indian Pueblo Cultural Center Museum,history,collections,exhibit exhibition collection,promote,product products display sale,ed
RMG3CN23–Pueblo Indians with pottery, New Mexico, USA
RMPBCWN0–1236 Pueblo Indians Selling Pottery (NBY 429091)
RMKKJXGW–The Pueblo Indians of San Ildefonso in New Mexico have long practiced traditional pottery-making, creating intricate designs and forms by hand, without the use of a pottery wheel. Their work is known for its distinctive style and cultural significance.
RMH9Y2G8–Bandelier National Monument showcases ancestral Pueblo pottery-making techniques, reflecting the rich cultural history of the area. Visitors can learn about traditional methods and their connection to the land and community.
RM2M3NPYP–Pueblo Indians of San Ildefonso making pottery without pottery's wheel , Tichnor Brothers Collection, postcards of the United States
RMW31M3M–Pueblo woman balancing a pot on her head, from Robert N Dennis collection of stereoscopic views
RMPND1NM–1930s NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN WOMAN ARTIST MAKING POTTERY SAN ILDEFONSO PUEBLO NEW MEXICO USA - i1568 HAR001 HARS B&W NORTH AMERICA CLAY PRIDE CERAMIC OCCUPATIONS STYLISH COIL NATIVE AMERICAN PUEBLO SAN ILDEFONSO CREATIVITY MID-ADULT NEW MEXICO BLACK AND WHITE HANDMADE HAR001 INDIGENOUS NM OLD FASHIONED POTTER
RM2JKKPTF–Black and white historical photograph of a Pueblo woman making and selling large traditional pots
RF3E2AGWM–Women baking bread by Carl Moon, depicting two Native American women preparing and baking bread in an outdoor adobe oven, with traditional dress, pottery, and a village setting reflecting daily life and cultural practices.
RF2PNHJN5–Pueblo Indians Making Pottery from the book ' New Mexico, the land of the delight makers ' by George Wharton James, The History of its Ancient Cliff Dwellings and Pueblos, Conquest by the Spaniards, Franciscan Missions; Personal Accounts of the Ceremonies, Games, Social Life and Industries of its Indians; A Description of its Climate, Geology, Flora and Birds, its Rivers and Forests ; A Review of its Rapid Development, Land- Reclamation Projects and Educational System ; with full and accurate accounts of its Progressive Counties, Cities and Towns. Published in 1920 Boston, The Page company as
RM2AGB58B–. The 1916 exposition in black and white; being a series of pencil drawings of the Panama California international exposition, 1916. PIE TAOS PUEBLO IN THEPAINTED DESERT is an exactreproduction of the original in North-ern New Mexico. The Pueblo Indiansare living here exactly as they are athome, busy with their pottery making,basketry and blanket weaving. JN APACHE LAND of this same exhibitmay be found the Apache Indians in theirWickiups, the same as one would find themon the Arizona reservations..
RMPAGAT5–A pueblo pottery-making
RM2A519CB–Jar, c. 1890-1910. In the southwest, pottery-making achieved two peaks. The first was in the late archaeological period, and the second was brought about by modern Pueblo women starting in the late 1800s. One of these women was the legendary Nampeyo, who revived fine Hopi potterymaking after a long period of artistic deterioration. To do so, she sometimes adapted the designs and shapes of Sityaki-style ceramics, which she and her husband found at ancient ruins. Comparison of this vessel to the Sityaki example to the left reveals Nampeyo’s relationship to the past.
RMAT0ENN–A Jemez Indian woman and Jemez Pueblo in the Jemez Mountains of New Mexico makes traditional native american pottery
RFKEHF1M–Mixed race woman shaping clay in art studio
RMPBJPCR–1865 Woman Decorating Pottery, Pueblo Isleta, New Mexico (NYPL b12647398-69730)
RMM76X2T–A photograph depicting a woman from the Pueblo of Isleta decorating pottery. The Pueblo people are known for their rich cultural traditions, including pottery making, which has been passed down through generations.
RMH9Y2HN–Bandelier National Park offers a hands-on pottery-making experience, highlighting the rich cultural history of the Ancestral Puebloans. Visitors can engage in crafting pottery while learning about the traditional methods and techniques used by the early inhabitants of the park.
RM2M1FXJA–Pueblo Indians of San Ildefonso making pottery without pottery's wheel , Tichnor Brothers Collection, postcards of the United States
RM2AM10G9–Tesuque Indian making images, Tesuque, New Mexico Tesuque Indian making images, Tesuque, New Mexico.; Tesuque Indian making images, Tesuque, New Mexico.
RMFPW23K–1930s TWO NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN WOMEN FINISHING POTTERY SANTA CLARA PUEBLO NEW MEXICO USA
RM2AGB5RN–. The 1916 exposition in black and white; being a series of pencil drawings of the Panama California international exposition, 1916. :if::m^^f&&^tf^^^^. PIE TAOS PUEBLO IN THEPAINTED DESERT is an exactreproduction of the original in North-ern New Mexico. The Pueblo Indiansare living here exactly as they are athome, busy with their pottery making,basketry and blanket weaving. JN APACHE LAND of this same exhibitmay be found the Apache Indians in theirWickiups, the same as one would find themon the Arizona reservations.
RM2A51N9C–Olla (Jar), c. 1100-1250. The Anasazi lived for centuries in small agricultural settlements scattered across Four Corners region of the southwest. After AD 850, however, favorable factors converged and they built the most ambitious architectural projects ever constructed in native North America: Chaco Canyon's great houses and cliff dwellings at such sites as Mesa Verde. Pottery-making also reached a high point during this period, as this vessel testifies. By 1300 the Anasazi had dispersed, forming groups ancestral to many modern Pueblo peoples, including the Hopi and the Zuni.
RMEPDNKM–An Indian potter or pottery maker from Jemez Indian Pueblo in New Mexico
RFKEHF6E–Mixed race woman shaping clay in art studio
RMPBCWN7–1236 Pueblo Indians selling Pottery (NYPL b12647398-62794)
RMKJDY00–Gfp southwest pueblo pottery
RMDEB4EF–Zuni, a Native American pueblo located in New Mexico, is known for its rich cultural heritage and artistic traditions, particularly in pottery and jewelry making.
RM2H12YWR–Wedding Jar, 1900. Southwest, Pueblo, Santa Clara, Post-Contact, 20th century. Ceramic; overall: 15.5 x 21.5 cm (6 1/8 x 8 7/16 in.).
RM2AMB1A8–Pueblo Indians selling Pottery Postcard series number: 6502 1902-1903. Transitioned to full-size illustration, when postal regulations permitted address and message together on reverse.; Pueblo Indians selling Pottery
RMRG61CT–. Bulletin - United States National Museum. Science. Sometimes pottery was worked as stone. This piece (fig. 47) is remarkable for the amount of labor which has been expended in drill- ing, grinding, and finishing a fragment of pottery to produce a result requiring some ingenuity to interpret. It is a good example, however, of the working of pottery in the manner of stone, examples of which, usually quite simple, are observed in the spindle whorls, scrapers, and disks found with com- parative frequency in the ruins in the Pueblo region. The carving appears to represent an animal or perhaps two
RM2MBDPE1–Acoma, New Mexico area views, between 1899 and 1928.
RMF292K2–A beautiful wedding vase made by potter Marie Gachupin Romero of Jemez Pueblo, born July 27, 1927, and died in 2007. She had been making pottery of the finest quality for over 50 years. The faces of her figurines are beautifully sculpted and always portray an angelic presence. She most often combined matte-paint and stone-polished slip in the same piece. Her specialty was figurative pottery, primarily storytellers and nacimientos.
RFKEHF13–Mixed race woman shaping clay in art studio
RMPBCWN2–1236 Pueblo Indian Selling Pottery, New Mexico (NYPL b12647398-63081)
RMKKJXNE–Pottery makers at San Ildefonso Pueblo in New Mexico are known for their traditional methods of creating handcrafted pottery, a key cultural and artistic practice in Native American history.
RMDH2K2C–Interior view of pottery in a traditional Acoma Pueblo dwelling in New Mexico, circa 1900.
RM2M3NA7A–Pottery makers at San Ildefonso Pueblo, New Mexico , Tichnor Brothers Collection, postcards of the United States
RM2AMDYMN–Tesuque Woman Making Rain Gods, Pueblo Tesuque, New Mexico Postcard series number: 13956 Last series published primarily from company-owned or company-commissioned images.; Tesuque Woman Making Rain Gods, Pueblo Tesuque, New Mexico
RM2AJMNMF–Among the Pueblo Indians . went with our landlord to buyanother blanket and some pottery. One buck onwhom we called had several pieces, including a largejar decorated in conventional design, for which hewanted three dollars. Visiting several other placesin quest of a piece with bird ornamentation, we foundthat figure decoration was not characteristic of theSanto Domingo Indians. On making this discoverywe hastened back for the piece before chosen, andimagine our surprise to find that during our absencethe jar had increased in value one dollar and that theman would not for an instant consider h
RMDCYMX1–An elderly Indian woman from Jemez Indian Pueblo in New Mexico hand makes traditional Indian pottery, circa 1978
RFKEHF1Y–Mixed race woman shaping clay mask in art studio
RMKEMCAA–Pueblo of Cochiti, New Mexico, by Continent Stereoscopic Company
RMDEB4GD–Zuni Pueblo, located in New Mexico, is one of the oldest continuously inhabited communities in the United States. The Pueblo is known for its rich cultural heritage, pottery, and religious practices.
RM2H12M9J–Jar (Olla), 1875. Southwest, Pueblo, Acoma, Laguna, Post- Contact Period,19th century. Pottery; overall: 29 x 33.5 cm (11 7/16 x 13 3/16 in.).
RM2AKTKGB–Pueblo woman balancing a pot on her head Pueblo woman balancing a pot on her head.; Pueblo woman balancing a pot on her head.
RM2AN7JRT–The second school year; a course of study with detailed selection of lesson material, arranged by months, and correlated . mal foods. 2 Flame of candle above and below the window. 3 Apparatus for testing lung capacity. 4 Other uses of wind—to carry seed, to push ships. 5 Illustration of the stories. Painting1 January landscape : Hill, trees, frozen river. 150 THE SECOND SCHOOL YEAR 2 The sky and the clouds. 3 Fruits used as foods. 4 Some scene illustrating life of Pueblo Indians. Making 1 Miniature Cliff home. 2 Pottery of Cliff Dwellers. 3 Weaving of Cliff Dwellers. 4 The fruits in clay. Musi
RFKEHF1K–Mixed race woman shaping clay in art studio
RMKKKD1G–Pottery makers at San Ildefonso Pueblo in New Mexico are known for their skillful craftsmanship and cultural heritage. The image captures artisans at work, creating traditional pottery that has been passed down through generations, reflecting the rich Native American traditions of the region.
RMDH2GMX–This historical photograph depicts Native American artisans from Santa Clara Pueblo in New Mexico, creating pottery, a traditional craft passed down through generations.
RM2H11WAD–Water Jar/ Olla, 1900. Southwest, Pueblo, Zia, Post- Contact Period, 20th century. Ceramic; overall: 27 x 30.5 cm (10 5/8 x 12 in.).
RM2AGDFC4–Indian pottery at Santa Fe, New Mexico Indian pottery at Santa Fe, New Mexico.; Indian pottery at Santa Fe, New Mexico.;
RMRM8AJ8–. Annual report for the year ended June 30 .... United States National Museum. Corn, the most important food of the Pueblo tribes, was cultivated with very simple wooden tools— the hoe, rake, and planting stick. Many changes in style have occurred during the Pueblo's more than 1500 years of pottery- making. These examples are from the late 19th century. B ? THE GIFT OF THE GODS : FOOD OF THE PUE8LOS-. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly res
RMM76X26–A photograph depicting a woman from the Pueblo of Isleta decorating pottery, showcasing the craftsmanship and cultural heritage of Native American pottery.
RMDT0BKB–A photograph showcasing a collection of approximately 25 pieces of Pueblo Indian pottery, taken around 1900.
RM2H116C1–Water Jar (Olla), 1880s. Southwest,Pueblo, Acoma, Post-Contact Period, 20th century. Ceramic; overall: 24.5 x 27.5 cm (9 5/8 x 10 13/16 in.).
RMW92WJW–A pueblo pottery-making
RMM76X37–A photograph of a woman from the Pueblo of Isleta, New Mexico, decorating pottery, showcasing traditional craft and cultural heritage of the Pueblo people.
RMDFPT6F–The Santa Clara Pueblos is a Native American community in New Mexico, known for its rich cultural heritage, pottery, and historical significance. The pueblo reflects traditional Native American lifestyles and architecture.
RM2X78HFT–Pottery burners at Santa Clara, Title from item., Curtis no. 1785-05., Forms part of: Edward S. Curtis Collection ., Published in: The North American Indian / Edward S. Curtis. [Seattle, Wash.] : Edward S. Curtis, 1907-30, Suppl. v. 17, pl. 603.. Indians of North America, Arts & crafts, 1900-1910. , Pottery making, New Mexico, Pueblo of Santa Clara, 1900-1910.
RMW66HFT–Indians of Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico, making pottery, 1916
RMM76DDK–This photograph shows Pueblo Indians selling pottery in New Mexico, capturing a key aspect of Native American culture and commerce in the region.
RM2X78HMN–The Potter Santa Clara, Edward S. Curtis Collection , Curtis no. 1791-05., Published in: The North American Indian / Edward S. Curtis. [Seattle, Wash.] : Edward S. Curtis, 1907-30, Suppl. v. 17, pl. 602.. Indians of North America, Women, 1900-1910. , Indians of North America, Clothing & dress, 1900-1910. , Pueblo Indians, Women, 1900-1910. , Pueblo Indians, Clothing & dress, 1900-1910.
RM2A1J9XJ–Nampeyo, a noted Tewa Hopi potter of the Hano pueblo in northeastern Arizona, decorating pottery
RMK10HDM–Ancestral Pueblo, Chaco black on white pitcher, 1050 1150 CE, Heard Museum
RMW1FDTA–Indians of Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico, making pottery, 1916
RMM7736K–A woman from the Pueblo of Tesuque in New Mexico creates rain gods, a traditional craft, as part of the Fred Harvey series. This highlights Native American artistry and cultural heritage.
RMW5R1XX–Letter to Superintedent concerning additional women potters to go to St. Louis Exposition.; Scope and content: Letter to Supt. Crandall from Miss True inquiring if he wanted any other women from the pueblo to go to the St. Louis Exposition to demonstrate pottery making. There are some women she would not recommend.
RMM7JGA2–This image showcases Pueblo pottery-making, a traditional craft practiced by Native American communities in the Southwestern United States.
RMTY7X8P–Letter to Superintedent concerning additional women potters to go to St. Louis Exposition.; Scope and content: Letter to Supt. Crandall from Miss True inquiring if he wanted any other women from the pueblo to go to the St. Louis Exposition to demonstrate pottery making. There are some women she would not recommend.
RMM7JTBN–The Pueblo of Isleta is a Native American tribe located in New Mexico. The Pueblo has a rich cultural history and is known for its traditional adobe homes, agricultural practices, and distinctive pottery.