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Antique Museum Quality RARE ACOMA Pueblo NM Outstanding Pot Lucy M. Lewis 1930

$ 1055.47

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Artisan: Lucy M. Lewis
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Origin: SW USA
  • Condition: Condition is very good to Excellent given the age of the piece
  • Tribal Affiliation: AcomaPueblo NM

    Description

    Antique Museum Quality RARE ACOMA Pueblo NM Outstanding Pot Lucy M. Lewis 1930
    Antique Museum Quality RARE ACOMA Pueblo NM Outstanding Pot Lucy M. Lewis 1930
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    COLLECTOR'S CHOICE VERY RARE (Note: There will NEVER be another one like this)!
    This
    is from my personal collection and very hard to part with!
    Just sold one of these RARE pots, this is my Last one!
    This
    Museum Quality
    pot is a
    Rarity
    by
    Lucy M. Lewis and is one of her very early pieces, If you collect her works you will
    immediately
    recognize it as hers.
    Native American Indian pottery and ceramics, a beautiful pottery bowl from Acoma Pueblo, signed on the bottom this pot is beautifully formed with very thin walls, and wonderful artwork.
    This is a very great piece of Native American Indian pottery history most likely by one of the truly great artists of her time.
    A lovely Acoma pot with wonderful geometric design elements, Acoma Pueblo, New Mexico, c. 1930.
    The pot has beautiful design elements:
    The fine-line geometric designs on the pot are spectacular.
    This is a great piece of Native American Indian pottery History by one of the great masters.
    Condition is Excellent for it's age. Size: 4 1/2 inches high by 4 1/4 inches wide, at the widest part.
    About The Acoma Pueblo
    The word “Acoma” and related words which are equally correct and historically applicable- Akome, Acu, Acuo and Ako- denote “a place always prepared.”
    There is a great difference of opinion as to the age of the Acoma Nation. While traditional Acoma oral history reflects on a time far beyond our imagination, a time of creation and emergence onto this world, the Acoma people have always known of a special place called “Haaku,” a spiritual homeland prepared for their eternal settlement. Recent excavations on Acoma Mesa tend to suggest that Acoma was inhabited before the time of Christ. Archaeologists agree that it has been continuously occupied from at least A.D 1200. Acomas claim always to have lived on their mesa, hospitably receiving wandering tribes to share their valley which, at one time, had plenty of water and was excellent for farming.
    Lucy M. Lewis
    ca. 1895–1992
    Considered one of the matriarchs of American Indian pottery, Lucy M. Lewis was born and raised on Sky City mesa, a land formation more than three hundred feet high in Acoma Pueblo, west of Albuquerque, New Mexico.
    Since there were no schools on the mesa, Lewis received no formal education or art classes. She learned pottery as a young child from her great-aunt and other Acoma Pueblo women. Lewis was instrumental in reviving eleventh-century, Mimbres-style pottery, characterized by black lines on white slip.
    Lewis married and had nine children. She handled the household chores, helped her husband with the farming, and still found time for her pottery. Because of Acoma Pueblo’s remote location, Lewis was never helped – or interfered with – by archaeologists, museum curators, collectors, or tourists. She also did not travel to powwows or fairs, though she occasionally sold her pottery in the closest town, 20 miles away.
    Lewis’s pottery first became known outside the pueblo in 1950, when she received a blue ribbon at the Annual Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial in Gallup, New Mexico. During the 1980s and 1990s Lewis received awards from the American Crafts Council, the College Art Association, the state of New Mexico, and the Honolulu Academy of Fine Arts. Lewis continued to pot well into her 80s. Some of her daughters and grandchildren also create pottery.
    Artist Biography
    A leading Native American potter, Lucy Martin Lewis spent her entire life in Acoma Pueblo, New Mexico, leaving only to teach ceramics workshops across the country. For more than seven decades, she practiced the art of making dung-fired white pottery, noted for its black "thin-line" geometric abstractions derived from ancestral designs. First sold at roadside stands, her pottery became so prized that it is now in museum collections, including the Smithsonian Institution. In 1983 Lewis was honored with the New Mexico Governor's Award, one of many she received in recognition of her work.
    National Museum of American Art (CD-ROM) (New York and Washington D.C.: MacMillan Digital in cooperation with the National Museum of American Art, 1996)
    Luce Artist Biography
    Lucy M. Lewis remembered making pottery as a small girl in the Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico, one of the oldest continuously inhabited dwellings in North America. Like many American Indian potters, Lewis learned through observation and experimentation rather than formal training. She watched other Acoma women, particularly her aunt, make traditional pottery that was typically used for religious ceremonies. She also used local clay, whose location is known only to residents of the pueblo.
    Lewis initially produced unsigned objects with traditional Acoma designs and sold them along nearby highways like the historic Route 66. She began signing her pottery, however, as her personal style developed and she incorporated new interpretations of traditional designs and patterns. She also used shards of ancient pottery in her work and as inspiration, unlike other Acoma potters who used broken pieces from their own work. Lewis won her first award, a blue ribbon at the 29th Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial, when she was forty-eight, and her career flourished until her death. Many of Lewis's children and grandchildren continue her legacy by making pottery of their own.
    WRITINGS:
    INDIVIDUAL EXHIBITIONS
    1975:
    A Tribute to Lucy M. Lewis, Acoma Potter,
    Museum of North Orange County, Fullerton, California
    1977:
    The White House, Washington, D.C.
    1983:
    Northwood Institute, Houston, Texas
    1987:
    Honolulu Academy, Hawaii
    1988:
    Montclair Museum, New Jersey
    SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS
    1974:
    Seven Families in Pueblo Pottery,
    Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Albuquerque, New Mexico
    CAREER
    1980:
    Master Pueblo Potters
    , ACA Gallery, New York
    1982:
    Salute to Acoma Potters: Lucy Lewis and Marie Chino
    , Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, Santa Fe, New Mexico
    1983:
    Driscoll Gallery, Denver Colorado; also organized exhibition that toured the Peoples' Republic of China
    1983:
    Museum of New Mexico, Santa Fe
    COLLECTIONS
    Driscoll Gallery, Denver Colorado
    Idyllwild School of Music and the Arts, Idyllwild, California
    Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, Albuquerque, New Mexico Montclair Museum, Trenton, New Jersey
    Museum of New Mexico, Santa Fe, New Mexico
    Museum of North Orange County, Fullerton, California
    Northwood Institute, Houston, Texas
    Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
    NARRATIVE ESSAY:
    Lucy Lewis learned to make pottery by watching other Acoma women, through observation and experimentation, rather than formal art training. Her work was first influenced by the sacred pots she saw in the kivas, which had traditional Acoma designs--parrots, flowers, and rainbows. Early in her career, Lewis, like many other Acoma women, frequently sold works to tourists along the highway.
    The clay of Acoma differs from that of some of the eastern pueblos, exhibiting a cream or buff color as opposed to the red clay used in Santa Clara, San Ildefonso, and other pottery-making centers, and ground potshards are used to temper Acoma clay for stability, rather than volcanic ash. Frequently, Acoma potters use shards from their own pots that have been destroyed during firing. Lewis, in contrast, used shards that she found on the ground, most likely Anasazi in origin.
    Lewis began to save the most interesting Anasazi shards, ultimately using them as inspiration for her work. She began to move away from traditional Acoma designs and to develop her own black on white fine-line hatch designs. A comparison of her black on white patterns with Anasazi pottery reveals the strong influence Anasazi styles had on her work. She ultimately became known for her "star-burst" pattern, which consisted of fine black lines on a white background. It wasn't until the late 1950s, when she visited the New Mexico Museum of Anthropology, that she had an opportunity to see examples of fully intact ancient pottery (and was surprised to find collections of her own work). Consequently, she developed her hallmark style with only small fragments of ancient pottery as inspiration. It is here that the skills of observation and experimentation she developed as a child facilitated the development of her unique style.
    Lewis produced her pottery in the traditional manner, digging and preparing the clay herself. Using large coils of clay, she built her vessels row by row, smoothing the coils as she progressed. After scraping and smoothing a vessel, she covered it with white slip made from watered down clay. Lewis painted her designs on the pot with a yucca brush. In applying the design, she placed the largest forms at the widest part of the vessel. She creates balance and rhythm in her patterns by the manipulation of design elements in relationship to the form. Her style is quite unique, employing all-over, fine-line linear designs. Although the patterns seem to be made of straight lines, they actually swell and contract to accommodate the contours of the pot.
    Lewis represents one of a handful of women from her generation that brought recognition to southwestern pottery through innovation and dedication to artistic traditions. Like Nampeyo, Maria Martinez and Margaret Tafoya, Lucy Lewis built upon ancient pottery styles in developing her own unique expression. Her influence on subsequent generations is still being realized, and it reaches beyond the boundaries of Acoma Pueblo. For seventeen summers she taught and demonstrated traditional Acoma pottery and firing at the Idyllwild School of Music and the Arts, California. She accumulated many awards and honors during her career. The Women's Caucus for the Arts honored Lewis for her artistic accomplishments by presenting her with an award in 1992. Lewis, who was ill at the time, was not present to accept the award. She received the medal at her home at Acoma, and she died a few weeks later.
    SOURCES:
    PUBLICATIONS ON LEWIS: BOOKS
    Southwest Indian Craft Arts
    , by Clara Lee Tanner, University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1968, reprinted 1975
    Seven Families in Pueblo Pottery,
    Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1974
    A Tribute to Lucy M. Lewis, Acoma Potter,
    by John E. Collins, Museum of North Orange County, Fullerton, California, 1975
    Southwestern Indian Arts and Crafts,
    by Ray Manley, Ray Manley Photography, Tucson, 1975
    Pottery Treasures: The Splendor of Southwest Indian Art
    , by Jerry Jacka with text by Spencer Gill, Graphic Arts Center, Portland, 1976
    "Acoma Pueblo," by Velma Garcia-Mason,
    Handbook of North American Indians,
    edited by Alfonso Ortiz, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., 1979
    Generations in Clay: Pueblo Pottery of the American Southwest,
    by Alfred E. Dittert and Fred Plog, Northland Press, Flagstaff, 1980
    CAREER
    Master Pueblo Potters,
    by Susan Peterson, ACA Gallery catalog, New York, 1980
    Hewett and Friends
    , by Beatrice Chauvenet, Museum of New Mexico Press, Santa Fe, 1983
    Lucy M. Lewis: American Indian Potter,
    by Susan Peterson, Kodansha International, Ltd., Tokyo, 1984
    Acoma and Laguna Pottery
    , by Rick Dillingham with Melinda Elliott, School of American Research, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1992
    Fourteen Families in Pueblo Pottery
    , by Rick Dillingham, University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1994.
    PUBLICATIONS ON LEWIS: ARTICLES
    "Lucy Lewis: Acoma's Versatile Potter," by Minnie Oleman,
    El Palacio,
    vol. 75, no. 2, 1968
    "Nine Southwestern Indian Potters," by Rick Dillingham,
    Studio Potter
    , vol. 6, no. 1, 1976
    "Matriarchs of Pueblo Pottery," by Susan Peterson,
    Portfolio,
    November/December, 1980
    "Pueblo Pottery: 2000 Years of Artistry," by David L. Arnold,
    National Geographic,
    vol. 162, no. 5, November, 1982
    "The Pottery of Acoma Pueblo," by Rick Dillingham,
    American Indian Art,
    vol. 2, no. 4, 1983
    "Pueblo Pottery: Continuity and Change: Lucy Lewis," by Melanie Herzog,
    School Arts Magazine
    , vol. 90, no. 5, January 1991
    "American Craft Council Gold Medalists,"
    American Craft
    , August/September 1993
    "Remembering Two Great American Potters: Lucy Lewis and Maria Martinez," by Susan Peterson,
    Studio Potter
    , December 1994.
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