Isleta Pueblo Smoking Pipe with Human Face on Bowl [SOLD]

C3711C-pipe.jpg

+ Add to my watchlist Forward to Friend


Once Known Native American Potter
  • Category: Historic
  • Origin: Isleta Pueblo, Tue-I
  • Medium: clay, pigment
  • Size: 5-1/2” long x 1-1/4” diameter of bowl
  • Item # C3711C
  • SOLD

Once the group of Laguna Pueblo families, who had split from their native village, settled at Isleta Pueblo in a village they named Oraibi in 1879, they began to produce a large quantity of tourist pieces of pottery, sized down in scale to make it easy for the travelers to carry in their luggage.

 

Things popular with tourists were small bowls, sugar and creamer sets, salt and pepper sets, ashtrays, and vases. Perhaps, too, smoking pipes were popular, but they do not appear that frequently today, so it is surmised that not too many were made or that they were easily broken and discarded.  It is not likely that they were purchased to be used as a smoking device, but rather were considered souvenirs. The popular design for smoking pipes was a figural element, mostly poking fun at Spanish noblemen or merchants. Note the curled mustache and full beard on this one. There is no evidence that tobacco has ever been in the bowl of this pipe. It appears as new, even though it dates to circa 1900.

 

Condition: excellent condition

Recommended Reading: The Native American Curio Trade in New Mexico, 2008, by Jonathan Batkin.  This out-of-print book is currently not available from Adobe Gallery.

Provenance: from an Adobe client from New York

Once Known Native American Potter
  • Category: Historic
  • Origin: Isleta Pueblo, Tue-I
  • Medium: clay, pigment
  • Size: 5-1/2” long x 1-1/4” diameter of bowl
  • Item # C3711C
  • SOLD

C3711C-pipe.jpgC3711C-large.jpg Click on image to view larger.