Cochiti Pueblo Pottery Seated Female Storyteller with Tableta and Two Children by Louis and Virginia Naranjo [SOLD]
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- Category: Figurines
- Origin: Cochiti Pueblo, KO-TYIT
- Medium: clay, pigment
- Size: 7” height x 5” width x 5-¼” depth
- Item # C4319B SOLD
This Cochiti Pueblo Pottery Seated Female Storyteller with Tableta and Two Children by Louis and Virginia Naranjo with her eyes closed and her mouth open is beautifully dressed in a highly-decorated blouse over which she wears the traditional pueblo dress. She has a tableta on her head and is wearing high-top moccasins. Her dress is covered at the waist with a belt. Each of the two little girls is similarly dressed and each has her eyes closed and mouth open in the same manner as the adult. The figurine was co-signed by Virginia and Louis and was made in 1995.
Louis (1932-1997) and Virginia Naranjo (b.1932) were standard bearers for the proud figurative pottery tradition of Cochiti Pueblo. They crafted their figurines at the kitchen table in their comfortable adobe home at the pueblo. They worked almost every day crafting their art with great care, joking and exchanging the gossip of the day as they went along, accompanied by television, children and grandchildren. Their art provided a good life for them and it provided a legacy that will be with us for another century or more.
Condition: very good condition
Provenance: from the collection of a client from Albuquerque
Recommended Reading: The Pueblo Storyteller: Development of a Figurative Ceramic Tradition by Barbara Babcock Ph.D.
Relative Links: Louis Naranjo, Contemporary Pottery, Virginia Naranjo, Cochiti Pueblo, Louis and Virginia Naranjo
- Category: Figurines
- Origin: Cochiti Pueblo, KO-TYIT
- Medium: clay, pigment
- Size: 7” height x 5” width x 5-¼” depth
- Item # C4319B SOLD
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