Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts
Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts
Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts
Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts
Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug - Shumakolowa Native Arts

Frederica Antonio Pueblo Pottery Mug

Item Number: 007095
Regular price
$ 25.00
Sale price
$ 25.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Shipping and taxes calculated at checkout.

Description

An Indian Pueblo Store exclusive! This unique café-style ceramic mug is a replica of a single beautiful clay pot handcrafted by contemporary Acoma artist Frederica Antonio. Antonio specializes in fine hand-painted pots and wedding vases with eye-dazzling geometric designs, which she applies with her own homemade brushes crafted from yucca stems. While the original clay piece is already at home in a permanent collection in Albuquerque, this replica is a great gift idea and a meaningful way to bring traditional Pueblo pottery designs into your everyday life.

Collect all five designs, available exclusively at the Indian Pueblo Store!

Details

  • Collectible tall cafe style mug
  • Original designs by artist Frederica Antonio (Acoma Pueblo)
  • Cup measurements: 6"" H x 4-1/2 L x 3-1/4 W
  • 18 oz
  • Ceramic
  • This Item is Not Dishwasher or Microwave safe
  • The mugs are designed by Pueblo artists from New Mexico, and printed in the USA on imported ceramics.

About the Artist

Frederica Antonio was born in 1968 in Acoma Pueblo. She was inspired to continue the long family pottery tradition by her mother-in-law, Mildred Antonio. Frederica developed an interest in pottery-making while observing Mildred hand-coil and paint her own work.When she began making her own pottery at the age of 18, Mildred taught Frederica the fundamentals.

Frederica now specializes in contemporary hand-coiled pottery with intricate hand-painted designs. Every piece is hand-coiled in a distinct form, rendering each one unique. For painting, she fashions her own brushes from the stems of a yucca plant and uses various colors to give designs a unique three-dimensional effect.

Collector's Guide

The most celebrated and recognized art form of the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico is pottery. Pueblo pottery is known around the world for its remarkable beauty and craftsmanship. It has been made in much the same way for over a thousand years, with every step of creation completed by hand.

Pueblo potters do not use a wheel, but construct pots using the traditional horizontal coil method, or freely forming the shape. After the pot is formed, the artist polishes the piece with a natural polishing stone, such as a river stone, then paints it with a vegetal, mineral, or commercial slip. Finally, the pot is fired in an outdoor fire or kiln using manure or wood as fuel.

Santa Clara, San Ildefonso, Jemez, and Acoma Pueblos have distinctive pottery styles that are especially prized by collectors, but accomplished potters are working in all Pueblos.

Today, Pueblo pottery is an exciting and dynamic form, with many artists pairing traditional techniques with innovative and stylized designs. Those potters who continue to create pots using traditional methods possess an extraordinary level of skill, and their pots are highly valuable works of fine art that will be enjoyed for generations to come.

Read our Native American Pottery Collector's Guide.



Your connection to authentic Pueblo art and artists...

Learn More