Nampeyo Inspired Hopi Seed Jar with Birds [SOLD]

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Mark Tahbo, Hopi-Tewa Potter

In reviewing past purchases from Mark Tahbo, I noticed that every seed jar shape vessel we have purchased from him over the past few years has been different.  Some are taller than others, some shorter, some wider, some narrower, some with uprising shoulders, some with almost flat tops.  This is an excellent indication that Mark is not copying himself time after time but is truly creating something new with each adventure.  He puts his creative effort into each individual vessel.

 

Another innovation by Mark is his choice of clay.  The artists at Hopi have a choice of clay from the Jeddito region, just behind the village of Polacca, or Sikyatki clay from the prehistoric ruins so important to the career of Nampeyo.  In this jar, Mark selected clay from Jeddito which fires to a beautiful orange blush.


It has even been speculated that the vessels of gold that the Spaniards were looking for could easily have been the beautiful gold-color prehistoric Jeddito wares. (Hargrave)*

 

Mark Tahbo (1958- ) signatureThis seed jar is low and wide with an almost flat top that rises just so slightly to a rim that curves upward.  A wide black framing line just below the rim and another one just below the mid-body set the boundaries for the design.  Mark chose two different birdswhich he described as a Quail (see top knot) and a Falcon (see beak).  On the two birds he colored a single tail feather with a blue/white clay he discovered at the Awatowi ruins at Hopi. 

  

The designs that alternate between the pair of birds is a more traditional rendering of the Sikyatki split tail feather seen on pottery by Nampeyo which she reintroduced from Sikyatki wares.

 

The orange color in the bodies of the birds is from a clay source and the dark burgundy seen in the split tail designs is from a rock.  This combination of paints is not something most Hopi potters employ.  Mark is unique in experimenting with sizes, shapes, clays, designs, colors and any other variation he envisions.

 

*American Southwest Virtual Museum, Northern Arizona University.

 

Condition: new

Recommended ReadingHopi-Tewa Pottery: 500 Artist Biographies by Gregory and Angie Schaaf

Provenance: from the artist

close up view - Nampeyo Inspired Hopi Seed Jar with Birds

Mark Tahbo, Hopi-Tewa Potter
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