- Pottery
- >
- Mojave female figure pottery, Attributed to Annie Fields
Mojave female figure pottery, Attributed to Annie Fields
Vintage female figure clay Mojave figure, made of clay and has beads, paint, and pink pants. In excellent condition. Dates from the 1950's. It has a sticker on the back that says, Female Mojave with numbers 3263 and a symbol signature. Attributed to Annie Fields, (1884-1971) Her females have bulging eyes outlined in black and with black pupils. Forehead is painted brown with facial tattoos below the eyes.
The land of the Mojave, the most northern of the Yuman tribes, stretched from Black Canyon to the Picacho Mountains below today’s Parker Dam, straddling the Colorado River.
The Mojave could be a fierce people willing to protect their land, and willing to venture far from it. They traveled to the Pacific Coast, becoming proficient traders. They exchanged with coastal tribes surplus crops for goods they desired and valued, such as shells.
And back along the banks of the river, they made pottery from sedimentary clay and crushed sandstone. The material was coiled into shape, dried, painted and fired in either open pits or rudimentary kilns. They created pots, bowls, ladles and dishes decorated with geometric designs. And the women took the crafts further by making unique pottery dolls for the children, dressing and decorating them like people, complete with human hair.
The art of tattoo was important to the Mojave. They tattooed their faces with lines and dots - a cosmetic, fashionable practice.
Measurements: 8 1/2" tall x approximately 3 3/4" deep x 2 1/2" wide (at stand), figure is 1 1/2" wide.