Zuni Pottery Makers

“In this mural the artist has attempted to . . . put on canvas for the observers to see what the Zuni pottery maker has in her conscious and subconscious mind as she makes her pot, the traditions of gathering and working the clay, the religious beliefs and fervor, the history of her people and their traditions which go to make up this her work [sic],” wrote Anna Keener Wilton1 of her painting Zuni Pottery Makers in a 1942 thesis for her master’s degree from the University of New Mexico.2

In her essay, Keener Wilton positions Zuni Pottery Makers as a documentary painting—based on anthropological and ethnographic research, at least one interview with a potter, and, presumably, her own firsthand observations—that illustrates the A:Shiwi (Zuni) pottery-making process step by step. Keener Wilton’s mural is organized around a central master potter (more on her later). As she explains it, the narrative begins with the figure in the top right starting her journey to gather clay from the distant mesas by, “in accordance with the tradition of the pot maker . . . cast[ing] over her shoulder a stone, so that her strength may not fail her.” The same figure is depicted at top left “returning with a load of clay, as much as a hundred and fifty pounds in her blanket, the ends tied and banded across her forehead.” Keener Wilton continues, “in the left foreground we see the next step of the process, the clay being kneaded,” and explains that potters knead the clay to such a fine texture “that the fingers can no longer guide the senses; then it is tested with the tongue as portrayed by the figure above the kneader.” Finally, “to the observer’s right are to be seen the youthful apprentices, forming in the age-old method of their ancestors, the pots of modern Zuni.”3

Zuni Pottery Makers also documents the evolution of A:Shiwi pottery designs. As Keener Wilton writes: “By the use of panels in the composition the artist has attempted to portray the various stages in the development of pottery design from the earliest known period to the present day.” Early designs are replicated in the upper left, later designs in the upper right, and contemporary designs in the middle. “Along the border at the base of the composition are six relatively modern designs . . . of a religious nature.” She also states that she “wishes to point out that every example of design portrayed on the mural has been found in existence in or near Gallup, New Mexico” (though certain designs have been questioned by present-day potters).

In addition to diagramming the process and development of A:Shiwi pottery, Keener Wilton puts forth several major contentions in her essay: a) for a Zuni potter, “her work is born with her”; b) Zuni pottery is the highest form and full expression of Zuni culture; and, c) Zuni potters are great artists. In support of these statements, she places at the center of her mural a potter referred to in her essay as “Mrs. Poncho”4—one of her primary sources for her thesis. Mrs. Poncho is shown demonstrating “how she . . . measures [the pot] by spreading her hands so as to obtain the exact spacing for the design she has visualized,” which is pictured above her head “surrounded by a halo.” In her essay, Keener Wilton quotes Mrs. Poncho as saying, “I always know just how the jar will look before I start to paint it. I just think and think; then I draw what I think.” She goes on to assert her artistic genius as being able to conceive of the pot and design in unison and defends against assumptions of “mere decoration.”

Zuni Pottery Makers was likely installed in the wall of the original County Commission chambers of the historic McKinley County Courthouse soon after it was built. It still hangs in that location, which is now the District Attorney’s office.

Desert

In the 1930s and 1940s, painter Brooks Willis developed a reputation as an “extreme modernist.”1 The clean lines, hard edges, and sharp angles of Desert certainly live up to this reputation. Yet the soft glow of twilight on the horizon and gradation of light to dark blue in the sky softens the painting’s strict geometry and gives it a more naturalistic ambiance.

Comparing Desert to Willis’s painting Cottonwoods, made in the same year, reveals how the artist experimented with ideas of modernism. However abstract Desert is in its geometrical composition, it retains much of traditional European painting’s emphasis on depth and perspective. Cottonwoods, however, with its visible brushstrokes and high level of attention paid to the act of applying paint to canvas, rather than to developing an illusion of depth, might actually post a greater challenge to tradition.

Cottonwoods

Cottonwoods is a deceptively simple painting by an artist known in his day as an “extreme modernist.”1 Each individual brushstroke is legible: sunlit trees take form through the masterful placement of light and dark tones side by side in either short, stubby strokes or long, narrow strokes, which gracefully develop a sense of texture.

How Cottonwoods is unapologetically “modern” (by 20th-century standards) is fully understood in comparison to Brooks Willis’s painting Desert, made the same year. Desert takes the more immediately “modern” approach of abstraction, reducing its subject to geometric shapes. Cottonwoods, however, operates not on the level of style but on the level of technique, distilling the very concept of a painting to its most basic materials and methods.

Tilework

The first floor of the 1938 McKinley County Courthouse remains largely in its original condition, including its terrazzo flooring and tile wainscoting. While it is not known where or by whom these tiles were manufactured, it is probable that they are the output of a New Deal era vocational school or workshop. They appear to be designed and made specifically for the courthouse to complement its Southwestern architecture and the many Diné (Navajo) sandpainting-style wall paintings and Nuevomexicano tinwork light fixtures decorating its lobby. The primary pattern within the installation, seen in the arrangement of tan and blue tiles along the wide middle band, is a familiar alternating stepped-triangle design found in Diné weavings and baskets. Additionally, the motif of the second-to-top row of tiles echoes that of Ancestral Puebloan T-shaped doors (which are also used in the architecture of the courthouse in two instances).

(Note: The painted “District Attorney” sign seen in this photograph is a recent addition done in the same lettering style used in 1939 when the courthouse was opened.)

Tinwork Light

As a decorative art, tinwork has been practiced in the area that is now New Mexico for over 300 years. Originally developed by 18th-century Spanish colonists, it is a mestizaje, or hybrid, art form. As seen here, the practice combines Spanish motifs of rosettes and scallops with Indigenous designs of parrots and rainbows to create a distinctly “New Mexican” cultural expression.

Tinwork Light

New Deal art programs were broadly interested in cultivating a unique American artistic identity and in establishing the United States as an arts and cultural center with its own rich legacy and heritage separate from that of Europe. Toward that end, New Mexico’s Federal Art Project (FAP) heavily promoted Spanish Colonial art forms specific to what is now the Southwestern United States. Tinwork was developed by Spanish colonists in what is now New Mexico in the 1700s and became widely practiced after the opening of the Santa Fe Trail in 1821 and the corresponding increase in trade. The New Mexico FAP picked up the mantle of the tradition by directing the state’s workshop programs to train artists in the craft and to produce objects such as this light fixture, frames, and other decorative arts for newly constructed buildings.

Bench

The New Deal famously built a great number of public buildings. It also furnished those buildings, turning out an incredible quantity of decorative arts. In New Mexico, the Federal Art Project worked in concert with other New Deal programs and state vocational schools to set up workshops employing mostly Hispano artists to produce Spanish Colonial–style furniture and other items for newly constructed buildings across the state. This bench and an identical duplicate were created for the historic McKinley County Courthouse, which was built through the Public Works Administration in 1938.

Bench

In all likelihood, this bench was made at a 1930s State of New Mexico vocational school. During the New Deal, the state’s vocational schools and the Federal Art Project teamed up to manufacture furniture and decorative arts for newly constructed public buildings such as the 1938 McKinley County Courthouse, where this bench and an identical copy are housed. Schools operated according to a workshop model: students/artists were supplied with instructional bulletins, or production manuals, and worked individually and/or collaboratively to create pieces. Although designs were regulated, students/artists found ways to express original artistry. Unfortunately, the New Deal did not credit these students/artists—most of whom were Hispano—for their work.

Historic McKinley County Courthouse

This building was constructed through the Public Works Administration (PWA). The cornerstone was laid in 1938 and the building opened one year later. The PWA funding formula matched local investment 45 percent to 55 percent. McKinley County raised $125,000 through a general obligation bond—passed by voters 427 to 77 on August 9, 1938—and the PWA made a grant of $102,272.

The building was designed by Trost & Trost, an architecture and engineering firm based in El Paso, TX, to house county offices, including the County Commission chambers and County Treasurer, Clerk, and Assessor offices on the first floor, a courtroom on the second floor, and a jail on the third floor. Trost & Trost designed and built hundreds of buildings across the Southwest in the first half of the 1900s. In addition to the courthouse, the firm is responsible for three other Gallup buildings built in the 1920s/1930s, none of which still stand.

In its design for the McKinley County Courthouse, Trost & Trost fully embraced the mythology of “triculturalism,” which has pervaded New Mexico for generations. Triculturalism promotes the exceptionally simplistic view that the state is home to a harmonious melting pot of three main cultures, “Native American,” “Hispanic,” and “Anglo.” Of course, this narrative never has been inclusive of all of the population’s ethnicities or the great variety of ways New Mexicans identify themselves. The historic courthouse conceptualizes triculturalism, as its north, east, and south facades are designed to represent Anglo, Hispanic, and Native American cultures, respectively.

The building’s north face houses its main entrance and includes classic western European features such as a portico and columns along with Art Deco–style elements such as the geometric carved decorations at either end of the portico. Its east side resembles a Spanish mission church, with a high-arched doorway and bell tower. Its southern exterior is an interpretation of an Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwelling with a T-shaped door and flat wall accented by an asymmetrical arrangement of small, square-shaped, unframed windows.

The interior of the courthouse is highly decorated with tilework, wallpaintings and tinwork light fixtures throughout the first-floor lobby, and large mural titled Zuni Pottery Makers on the wall of a first-floor office. A 2,000-square-foot mural covers the walls of the second-floor courtroom, and the building was originally furnished handcrafted pine tables, chairs, benches and cabinets (now in storage).

Shalako

Shalako, which depicts an annual A:shiwi (Zuni) winter festival, is an action-packed, tremendously detailed painting. In it, Jose Rey Toledo captures everything from the central dancers’ movements and regalia to the backdrop with supreme precision. Notice the fine lines delineating each individual bead on the dancers’ necklaces, how headdress feathers have been colored one by one, and how the artist renders the fringe of the woven sashes worn by the two dancers on the left with pinpoint-size brushstrokes. Behind them, more than two dozen onlookers are individually represented, each with distinct facial features, clothing, and postures. Toledo’s meticulousness even extends to the background, where each element is finely articulated, including the perched owl’s feathers.

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Gallup’s New Deal art collection consists of over 120 objects created, purchased, or donated from 1933 to 1942 through New Deal federal art programs administered by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to support artists during the Great Depression.

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