Polychrome Seed Jar with Expanding Design [SOLD]
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- Category: Modern
- Origin: Acoma Pueblo, Haak’u
- Medium: Native materials
- Size: 4-1/8" tall x 4-1/4" diameter
- Item # C2893D SOLD
Dorothy Torivio has been the most progressive artisan at Acoma Pueblo since the early 1980s. She was born at Acoma Pueblo and is renowned for her innovative work in exaggerated seed-pot forms in large and miniature sizes. She covers her hand-coiled and pit-fired pots with black and white or polychrome patterns of staggering intricacy, painted fresh, and with computer-like precision.
Torivio has extrapolated the innovative forms and decorations that were initiated by the famous Acoma potters of the previous generation, Lucy Lewis and Marie Chino. She learned to make pottery from her mother-in-law, Lolita Concho, who taught her how to paint fine lines. She, herself, devised the method of choosing a design and repeating it over and over in a geometric pattern. Each design element in her repertoire has its root in Mimbres symbols.
Her pottery pieces are traditional in manufacture but progressive in design. The design is based in repetition of a singular element meandering throughout the vessel, starting small at the rim and underbody and expanding in scale as the pottery vessel expands at its midsection.
This small seed jar is an excellent example of the style and workmanship of Torivio’s repertoire. The expanding scale of the designs from the neck downward is rendered in perfection. The jar is in excellent condition.
- Category: Modern
- Origin: Acoma Pueblo, Haak’u
- Medium: Native materials
- Size: 4-1/8" tall x 4-1/4" diameter
- Item # C2893D SOLD

