Description
Traditional handmade Native American Indian Pottery from Indigenous Pueblos of the Southwest. Guaranteed authentic Pueblo Pottery. Good vintage condition.
This handmade Native American pottery olla is a beautiful example of traditional Pueblo craftsmanship from the Indigenous Pueblos of the American Southwest. Carefully hand-coiled from natural clay and fired using time-honored techniques, this jar reflects pottery methods passed down through generations of Pueblo artists.
Each pottery form features designs inspired by nature, cultural symbolism, and daily Pueblo life, with hand-applied pigments derived from natural minerals and earth materials. Sourced directly from Pueblo lands, this authentic Southwestern pottery was created entirely by hand—without molds—making every piece one of a kind.
Highly valued by collectors, this Native American pottery jar works beautifully as a display piece, cultural art object, or heirloom collectible, representing the enduring traditions of Pueblo pottery and Indigenous artistry.
About The Artist
Anderson Peynetsa is a traditional potter from Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico, a community with deep ceremonial traditions and a long history of Pueblo pottery. Working within Zuni’s ancestral methods, Anderson hand-coils each vessel using native clay gathered from tribal lands and prepares natural mineral pigments for his painted designs.
More About the Artist
Pueblo
Zuni Pueblo, located in western New Mexico near the Arizona border, is one of the most culturally rich and historically significant Pueblo communities in the Southwest. The Zuni people have lived in this region for centuries, maintaining strong ceremonial traditions, language, and artistic practices rooted in their ancestral homeland.
Zuni pottery continues ancestral Pueblo techniques using native clay and natural mineral pigments. Each vessel is hand-coiled, stone-polished, hand-painted, and traditionally outdoor-fired. Zuni pottery often features deer, birds, heartline motifs, and flowing organic patterns that reflect spiritual symbolism and a deep connection to nature.
More About This Pueblo