Tesuque Polychrome Bowl with Turtles [SOLD]

C3215Y-bowl.jpg

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Lorencita Pino, Tesuque Pueblo Potter
  • Category: Modern
  • Origin: Tesuque Pueblo, TET-SUGEH
  • Medium: clay, paints
  • Size: 4-1/8” deep x 7-1/2” diameter
  • Item # C3215Y
  • SOLD

Lorencita Pino signature

When Duane Anderson was gathering data for his book, When Rain Gods Reigned: From Curios to Art at Tesuque Pueblo, he spoke with a number of potters and many of them related what they knew about the early potters at Tesuque.  One of the interesting and funny comments was from the daughters of Ignacia Duran.  To quote from Anderson:

 

"They told me that in the early 1930s Osalla Padilla, Lorencita Pino, Anastasia Herrera Pino and Marie E. Herrera went from house to house making rain gods.  Each individual made sets of legs, arms, bodies, and heads and then assembled about 100 of them.  After they dried, the group would make the rounds again and paint the ones they had made earlier.  This appears to be the closest the artists ever came to mass-producing rain gods.  Lorencita was said to have been the fastest maker, followed by Anastasia Pino."

 

This account helps us somewhat establish the period of production of Lorencita Pino.  If she was productive and good at making pottery in the early 1930s, then she must have been born around 1910.  Records indicate that she placed an entry in the 1979 Santa Fe Indian Market and was awarded First Place for the entry.

 

This bowl was well constructed and exquisitely painted.  Four turtles in bas relief surround the body.

Provenance:  from the collection of Katherine H. Rust

When Duane Anderson was gathering data for his book, When Rain Gods Reigned: From Curios to Art at Tesuque Pueblo, he spoke with a number of potters and many of them related what they knew about the early potters at Tesuque.  One of the interesting and funny comments was from the daughters of Ignacia Duran.  To quote from Anderson:  “They told me that in the early 1930s Osalla Padilla, Lorencita Pino, Anastasia Herrera Pino and Marie E. Herrera went from house to house making rain gods.  Each individual made sets of legs, arms, bodies, and heads and then assembled about 100 of them.  After they dried, the group would make the rounds again and paint the ones they had made earlier.  This appears to be the closest the artists ever came to mass-producing rain gods.  Lorencita was said to have been the fastest maker, followed by Anastasia Pino.”  This account helps us somewhat establish the period of production of Lorencita Pino.  If she was productive and good at making pottery in the early 1930s, then she must have been born around 1910.  Records indicate that she placed an entry in the 1979 Santa Fe Indian Market and was awarded First Place for the entry.  This bowl was well constructed and exquisitely painted.  Four turtles in bas relief surround the body. Provenance:  from the collection of Katherine H. Rust

 

Lorencita Pino, Tesuque Pueblo Potter
  • Category: Modern
  • Origin: Tesuque Pueblo, TET-SUGEH
  • Medium: clay, paints
  • Size: 4-1/8” deep x 7-1/2” diameter
  • Item # C3215Y
  • SOLD

C3215Y-bowl.jpgC3215Y-large.jpg Click on image to view larger.