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Pueblo PotteryPottery

The School has one of the most definitive collections of Southwestern Indian pottery representing more than twenty Pueblo communities and numerous other southwestern tribes (including Navajo, Apache, and Mojave), and represents all stylistic and technical traditions spanning more than four centuries of artistic production.

The collection of Rio Grande Pueblo pottery numbers almost four thousand pieces and is thought by some scholars as one of the most extensive collections available for study.

New PublicationAll That Glitters

The IARC is pleased to announce the publication of  All That Glitters: The Emergence of Native American Micaceous Art Pottery in Northern New Mexico (edited by Duane Anderson with a forward by Lonnie Vigil).  
     Luminous golden and sparkling black pottery fashioned from mica-rich clays has been made by Pueblo and Jicarilla Apache Indians of the northern Rio Grande region for at least five hundred years. In this generously illustrated volume, Duane Anderson presents the first comprehensive study of micaceous pottery in New Mexico and explores its current transition from a traditional culinary ware to an exciting contemporary art form.
    Anderson traces the history and prehistory of micaceous pottery making in the Southwest, describes pottery-making techniques, and explores the development of micaceous ware as a fine art. The volume includes a complete, illustrated catalog of the micaceous pottery collections of SAR's Indian Arts Research Center, a comprehensive survey of Southwestern micaceous ceramics in museums worldwide, and a roster of micaceous potters practicing in northern New Mexico today.

Read more about All That Glitters: The Emergence of Native American Micaceous Art Pottery in Northern New Mexico.

Research on the collection has resulted in the publication of numerous articles and books, including the definitive Acoma & Laguna Pottery by Rick Dillingham (SAR Press 1992).

Read more about Acoma & Laguna Pottery.