Tohono O’odham Pottery Friendship Vase [SOLD]
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- Category: Modern
- Origin: Tohono O´odham, Papago
- Medium: clay, pigment
- Size: 6-1/2” tall x 7” diameter
- Item # C3235N SOLD
Most pottery of this tribe was and is made by women, however, in the Angea family of potters, there were a couple men who produced as well. The Angea family began when Joe Angea of Hickiwan Village married Felistia of Kaka Village and they eventually had ten children. Felistia was a potter and continued making pottery using local clay and materials and she taught four of her daughters and two sons to make pottery. Their son Rupert is the only male to continue making pottery and his brother James only made it occasionally. The daughters continued and taught grandchildren as well. Both Joe and Felistia passed away in 1987.
Since members of the family signed their pottery only with the name Angea, it is generally not possible to determine which family member made individual pieces. This vase is signed Angea Tohono O'odham which would indicate a date of manufacture after the tribe changed its name from Papago back to its ancestral name Tohono O'odham in the 1980s. One of Joe's and Felistia's daughters would have made it and of their two sons, only Rupert signs with an initial R.
The friendship vase represents a social dance and all are invited to join. It is a creation of the 20th century as it has not been found in 19th century Papago pottery records.
The Tohono O'odham reside on a government-created reservation in Arizona with some members living across the border into Mexico. Their previous name, Papago, was placed on them by the Conquistadores who misinterpreted the name the Pima Indians called them— Ba:bawĭkoʼa, meaning "eating tepary beans," which was pronounced Papago by the Spanards.
Condition: the vase is in original condition with a slight abrasion on the underside where a piece of tape was removed.
Provenance: from the collection of Katherine H. Rust
Recommended Reading: Papago Indian Pottery by Bernard L. Fontana, et. al. University of Washington Press, Seattle. 1962
- Category: Modern
- Origin: Tohono O´odham, Papago
- Medium: clay, pigment
- Size: 6-1/2” tall x 7” diameter
- Item # C3235N SOLD
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