Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Since historical records have been kept, Pueblo potters have been almost exclusively women. There is every reason to expect that this has always been true. Nampeyo became the most famous potter who revived Hopi ceramic art around the turn of the 20th century. Drawing upon archaeological Sikyatki shapes, colors, and motifs, Nampeyo created her own inventive designs, continuing the Pueblo tradition of resynthesis and renewal. Today her descendants Dextra Quotskuyva Nampeyo and Fannie Nampeyo carry on the tradition, along with many other excellent potters throughout the Pueblo world.
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Nasca — Bowl with Half-Circle with Projections Motifs Descen
Pueblo of Acoma — Polychrome Jar
Nasca — Cup with Repeated Spotted, Curved Line Motif
Paracas — Bowl with Thickly-Painted Polychrome Zigzag Motif
Pueblo De Cochiti — Polychrome Jar
Nasca — Bowl with Band of Abstract Spiders around Rim
Paracas — Bowl with Incised and Painted Zigzag Motif
Casas Grandes — Ramos Polychrome vessel
Casas Grandes — Storage Vessel with Snake Relief
Hopi Tribe — Polychrome Jar
Pueblo of Acoma — Black-and-White Storage Jar with Abstract
Nasca — Bowl Depicting Costumed Ritual Peformers in Horizont