Biography of potter nampeyo
The Allure and Tension in Defining Iconic Pueblo Potter ...
- Nampeyo (1859 [1] – 1942) [2] was a Hopi-Tewa potter who lived on the Hopi Reservation in Arizona.
Nampeyo of Hano | Native American Pottery - Eyes of the Pot
- Nampeyo ( [1] – ) [2] was a Hopi-Tewa potter who lived on the Hopi Reservation in Arizona.
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- Beginning of manufacture of Sikyatki Revival Pottery.
priscilla namingha nampeyo | Nampeyo, Arizona's best-known Native potter of the twentieth century, was. |
nampeyo migration pattern | Hopi–Tewa potter Nampeyo (c. |
nampeyo photos | Nampeyo (1859 – 1942) was a Hopi-Tewa potter who lived on the Hopi Reservation in Arizona. |
Fannie Nampeyo - Wikipedia
Priscilla Namingha - Wikipedia
The Nampeyo Legacy: A Family of Hopi-Tewa Potters
- Hopi artist Nampeyo [c] established a name for herself making pottery that has roots in a tradition hundreds of years old.
Nampeyo and Her Pottery - UAPress
Nampeyo Biography - Infoplease
Nampeyo (c. 1860–1942) -
Nampeyo (c. 1860–1942)
Hopi-Tewa potter.Name variations: Nampayu; The Old Woman; Snake Woman, Snake Girl or Tsu-mana. Born Nampeyo on the Hopi First Mesa called Hano, northeast Arizona, around 1860; died on July 20, 1942, in Hano; daughter of Kotsakao, also called Qotca-ka-o (a Tewa woman of the Corn Clan), and Kotsuema also called Qots-vema (a Hopi man of the Snake Clan); married Kwivioya, in 1879 (marriage annulled, date unknown); married Lesou, in 1881 (died 1932); children: (second marriage) four daughters, Kwe-tca-we, Ta-wee, Po-pong-mana, and Tu-hi-kya; one son, Qoo-ma-lets-tewa (died 1918).
Interest began in ancient (Sikyatki) pottery (1892); pottery noticed by visiting anthropologists, Dr. Jesse W. Fewkes and Walter Hough of the Smithsonian (1895–96); first exhibition of pottery at Field Museum in Chicago, Illinois (1898); exhibition and sales of pottery through Fred Harvey's (a commercial trading post), Grand Canyon, Arizona (1907); second exhibition in Chicago (1