Hopi Pottery Ladle [SOLD]

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Garnet Pavatea, Flower Girl, Hopi-Tewa Potter

Garnet Pavatea had a long and productive career of pottery making and was a favorite of collectors of Hopi pottery. Her father was a Hopi and her mother a Tewa. She lived at the Tewa Village on First Mesa on the Hopi Reservation. She was an active potter from circa 1940 to circa 1981. She is best known and was fond of making plain red bowls and jars with triangular indentations around the rim as the sole decoration. Often, she made ladles to accompany her bowls. The Museum of Northern Arizona in Flagstaff amassed a major collection of her work. She passed away in the early-1980s.

This ladle is simply decorated along the handle and has a black rim around the bowl. The handle ends in a hook to facilitate the ladle to adhere to a bowl rim. The underside of the bowl of the ladle is signed Garnet Pavatea.

Condition: The ladle is in original excellent condition.

Provenance: From the estate of Transcendental artist Florence Pierce of Albuquerque who passed away in 2007 at the age of 89. She was best known for luminescent paintings made of pigmented resins on reflective surfaces. Her interest in abstraction began in the 1930s when she was an associate of the Transcendental Painting Group. The New York Times called her

Garnet Pavatea, Flower Girl, Hopi-Tewa Potter
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