Cochiti Pueblo Female with Child in Cradleboard [SOLD]

C3688-76-story.jpg

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Seferina Ortiz, Cochiti Pueblo Potter
  • Category: Figurines
  • Origin: Cochiti Pueblo, KO-TYIT
  • Medium: clay, pigment
  • Size: 5-1/8” height x 5-1/2” depth x 5” width
  • Item # C3688.76
  • SOLD

In the first decade following the creation of the storyteller figurine by Helen Cordero, only about eight potters at Cochiti Pueblo were producing such figurines. It was these eight potters that we featured in our first Storyteller Exhibit in the early 1980s. Among them was Seferina Ortiz. She is one of the earliest and long-lasting potters to make storyteller figurines.

 

Seferina Ortiz (1931-2007) signatureSince Seferina passed away in 2007, it has been more difficult for us to acquire pottery figurines made by her because most collectors who have them are keeping them since they cannot be replaced. It is a pleasure for us to be able to post this one to our site at this time.

 

A collection of 32 items of pottery by Seferina is in the Peabody Museum of Harvard University.  She is considered one of the matriarchs of the potter population of Cochiti Pueblo.  Not only did she leave a legacy of her pottery, she left a legacy in her childrenJoyce, Janice, Inez, Virgil, Leon and Angie, some of whom are considered top potters today.

 

This wonderful female figurine is sitting with a child in a cradleboard resting on her legs.  It appears she is singing to the infant.

 

Condition: original condition

Recommended Reading: The Pueblo Storyteller: Development of a Figurative Ceramic Tradition by Barbara Babcock, et al.

Provenance: from the collection of a family from Corrales, New Mexico

Alternate View

Seferina Ortiz, Cochiti Pueblo Potter
  • Category: Figurines
  • Origin: Cochiti Pueblo, KO-TYIT
  • Medium: clay, pigment
  • Size: 5-1/8” height x 5-1/2” depth x 5” width
  • Item # C3688.76
  • SOLD

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