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Maria Martinez: Notable New Mexican

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Maria Martinez: Notable   New Mexican

  A look at the life and art of Native American   craft artist and potter Maria Martinez (1887-1980 through the memories of her grand children.   Orginally broadcast on New Mexico PBS station KNME-TV.

Maria Martinez, a Native American artist,    was from the San Ildefonso Pueblo, a community located  20 miles northwest of Santa Fe, New Mexico and was known   for her traditional Pueblo pottery.

An excavation, in 1908, led by Edgar Lee Hewett, a professor of archaeology and the director of the Laboratory of Anthropology in Santa Fe, discovered  examples of black-on-black pottery.

       
  Maria was asked to recreate the black-on-black   pottery style for Hewett.  As almost all clay found   in the New Mexico desert was red, one specific challenge   was to figure out a way to dye the red clay jet black.   Maria discovered that smothering the fire surrounding   the pottery during the firing process caused the smoke   to be trapped. The carbon in the smoke caused the   pottery to turn to a black ash color (Hyde 20-23). She   experimented with the idea that an unfired polished   red vessel which was painted with a certain paint on top   of the polish and then fired in a smudging fire at a   relatively cool temperature would result in a deep   glossy black background with dull black decoration.   Shards or sheep and horse manure placed around the   outside and inside of the outdoor kiva-style adobe oven   would give the pot a slicker matte finished appearance.   After much trial and error, Maria successfully produced   a black ware pot. The first pots for the museum were   fired around 1910.

  According to Susan Peterson in The   Living Tradition of Maria Martinez,   these steps include, finding and   collecting the clay, forming a pot,   scraping and sanding the pot to remove   surface irregularities, applying the   iron-bearing slip and burnishing it to a   high sheen with a smooth stone,   decorating the pot with another slip,   and firing the pot . The first  step in creating a pot is gathering the   clay. The clay is gathered once a year,   usually in October when it is dry and   stored in an old weathered adobe   structure where the temperature remains   constant (Peterson 164).    


 When Maria is ready to   begin molding the clay to form a pot,   the right amount of clay is brought into   the house. A cloth, laid upon a table,   holds a mound of gray pink sand with a   fist hole in the center filled with an   equal amount of blue sand. A smaller   hole is made in the blue sand and water   is poured into the hole. The substances   are then all kneaded together, picked up   within the cloth, washed, and covered   with a towel to prevent moisture from   escaping where the clay will sit for a   day or two to dry. The pukis or “the  supporting mold, a dry or fired clay   shape where a round bottom of a new  piece may be formed" builds the base   shape of the pot looking like a pancake   (Peterson 167).  

       
  

Angel''s Nest is a  sustainable home in Taos, New Mexico made from straw bale, tires, pop cans and  bottles. The electricity is generated through wind and solar technology. Rain  water is captured as culinary water and there is a bio-diesel/hydrogen fueling  station outside. 


  Earthships
  Comfort in Any Climate by Michael Reynolds is an introduction to   building your own home using passive solar techniques.

 

 
 
 Earthships 101 part I
  

 

Earthships 101 part II
 

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