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Puebloan artist鈥檚 distinctive black pottery comes to 蜜糖直播 museum

The has debuted a new exhibit of works by potter Maria Martinez, a groundbreaking Puebloan artist known for her distinctive black-on-black designs

  If you go

What:Poveka: Master Potter Maria Martinez
When: Feb. 13 through summer 2019
Where: 蜜糖直播 Museum of Natural History
Tickets: Free and open to the public

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The exhibit opened this week and includes more than 20 pieces by Martinez, whose given name was Poveka, a Tewa word meaning 鈥減ond lily.鈥 Born in 1887 in San Ildefonso Pueblo in New Mexico, Martinez became a major force in expanding the influence of the region鈥檚 pottery beyond the Southwest. Her fame earned her, among other accolades, several invitations to the White House and a medal from the University of 蜜糖直播. 

Stephen Lekson, retired curator of archaeology for the 蜜糖直播 Museum, said that the new display is a prime showcase for the master potter鈥檚 skill. The exhibit boasts numerous finished pieces by Martinez, but also a series of bowls that show, step-by-step, how the artist achieved her signature look: layered matte-black designs over a polished-black surface.

鈥淢aria was critical to getting pottery recognized as an art, rather than curios you sold in a railroad station,鈥 said Lekson, a professor in the Department of Anthropology. 鈥淗er work was new and dynamic and different.鈥

Maria Martinez places plate
Museum staff get ready a display of bowls
Christina Cain places pot

Top: Master's student Alex Elliott. Middle: A display of five bowls showing how Maria Martinez achieved her signature black style. Bottom: Christina Cain, collections manager of anthropology at the 蜜糖直播 Museum, places a pot that Martinez gifted to the University of 蜜糖直播. (Credits: Glenn Asakawa/蜜糖直播 Boulder)

Back in black

Getting Martinez鈥檚 pottery ready for the public was delicate work, said Alex Elliot, a master鈥檚 student in 蜜糖直播 Boulder鈥檚 Museum and Field Studies Graduate Program. She and her colleagues on the museum鈥檚 collections team had to lower the nearly two-dozen pieces of fragile pottery into place, careful not to jostle the priceless works of art. 

鈥淕etting to show it off is so much fun,鈥 said Elliott, who鈥檚 studying to be a professional museum collections manager. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also a little nerve-wracking.鈥

The pieces on display highlight a wide range of shapes and designs, from large plates to delicate pitchers decorated with motifs of feathers, deer and other animals. 

The collection is a mix of old and new, Lekson said. Like many other potters of her era, Martinez relied on traditional techniques to craft her artwork. She used smooth stones to polish her pots and baked them in an open fire, not a kiln.

But the artist and her collaborators were also savvy experimenters. Maria Martinez and her husband Julian invented their black-on-black style in the early 1900s, inspired by pottery shards uncovered from an ancestral Pueblo site located nearby. The trick, Lekson said, didn鈥檛 come from a special glaze or paint, but from how the couple managed their fires.

鈥淭hey figured out that when the fire started to get cool, right toward the end, if you smothered it, the smoke would penetrate the pottery,鈥 Lekson said.

Martinez also signed many of her creations, a noteworthy flourish at a time when few indigenous women got individual credit for their work. 

鈥淚t highlighted the importance of individual artists associated with their names and a certain expectation of the quality and the design,鈥 said Jennifer Shannon, curator of cultural anthropology in the 蜜糖直播 Museum and an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology.

蜜糖直播 connection

Poveka鈥檚 renown also brought her recognition from the University of 蜜糖直播. Then-President Robert Stearns awarded Martinez a university medal during a ceremony in 1953. To commemorate the occasion, the artist gifted the university with one of her creations: a tall, gunmetal-gray pot that looks like a vase. Visitors to the exhibit can see that sleek pot alongside other works by Martinez in the Museum of Natural History鈥檚 Anthropology Hall.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 really special that in the early 1950s, she was already being recognized as a famous potter鈥攁nd she still is today,鈥 Shannon said. 

The exhibit Poveka: Master Potter Maria Martinez will run through summer 2019.