2 Native American Style Pottery Bowls

Discussion in 'Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain' started by kardinalisimo, Mar 7, 2019.

  1. kardinalisimo

    kardinalisimo Well-Known Member

    345B13CC-0AE3-40DF-9FB3-8D064CAE00B7.jpeg 689CA089-E529-41D7-A51E-F4D3C9A50B2E.jpeg 88F5FEA6-A6B4-43DC-B526-0AEF7D643A42.jpeg 2282EE16-5D23-4BEC-8FD2-F45003CA0A40.jpeg 80A7A236-5D99-483F-939B-F87A3337524D.jpeg I suspect something recent?
     
    scoutshouse and judy like this.
  2. Taupou

    Taupou Well-Known Member

    Look up Pamunkey Pottery, from the Pamunkey tribe, in Virginia.

    Although the Pamunkey had made a traditional type of pottery, this "style" was introduced in the 1930s as a state-sponsored program, that provided a Pottery School, teachers, and modern techniques of pottery, in an attempt to provide an additional source of income for the tribe.

    Kilns, glazes, molds, and other non-traditional methods and design patterns were used to produce pottery souvenirs for the market place. Copies of southwestern-style "pictographs" were introduced, in an attempt to re-create "Indian" looking items.

    It is claimed that some of the students later turned to more "traditional" pottery production, but from what I have ever encountered, this is the modern Pamunkey "style" that resulted from the program, and is still being produced today.
     
  3. kardinalisimo

    kardinalisimo Well-Known Member

    Thanks a lot for the info.
     
    scoutshouse likes this.
  4. Dawnno

    Dawnno Well-Known Member

    I know, digging up a string a month++ old is heresy. But, ...
    I bought a 1990s version at the reservation and got a nice photocopied piece of paper with it explaining the meaning of the pictographs. It goes like this (starts with the # [long before Twitter] and end with what looks like a bowl of hot soup (half circle with upward lines), each of the 12 pictographs being on a different line below:

    "on a given date
    which is the flying of the geese
    the Indians
    go on trail
    to meet
    the white men
    and with the same through [thought] in mind
    to agree
    to smoke the pipe of peach
    and present treaty furs
    to meet terms of the treaty
    and wish white man good luck."

    "Each year at Thanksgiving time, the members of the Pamunky Indian Tribe journey to Richmond to present certain wild game to the Governor of Virginia in accordance with the terms of the treaty of 1646, between the Indians and the representatives of the King of England. This is the story of the treaty."

    All historically true. Whether the pictographs were a good marketing ploy, don't know.
     
  5. Bronwen

    Bronwen Well-Known Member

    Nice idea. Probably smells pretty good.
     
    kyratango, scoutshouse and Dawnno like this.
  6. Taupou

    Taupou Well-Known Member

    Was wondering just what they were smoking...guess "the pipe of peach" explains a lot.
     
  7. Dawnno

    Dawnno Well-Known Member

    lol. Goes well with the thanksgiving turkey.

    Yes, correction: Not Peach. Pipe of Piece. ;) it was modular I hear.
     
    kyratango, scoutshouse and Bronwen like this.
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