Natseway, Charmae
“They say that the clay is where we come from. I consider my work a part of me. I feel good when someone buys one of my pieces who is really going to appreciate it. But, when we do sell it, we give a part of ourselves away.”
Born in 1958, Charmae Shields-Natseway is a member of the Yellow Corn Clan of Acoma Pueblo. She told us she has been working with clay since 1976.
“My mother had been making pottery most of her life,” she said. “I started back in seventy-six when we moved back here from Tucson. I needed a way to be self-employed and I needed money, so my mother taught me.”
Charmae comes from a distinguished family of Acoma potters that includes her mother, Ethel Shields, and her grandmother, Delores S. Sanchez. From them she learned the fundamentals of constructing pottery using the ancient method of hand coiling and pinching. That traditional learning has been passed down among Pueblo potters for generations.
Long-known for her exquisite seed pots, Charmae is also renowned for her unique forms of lidded/plugged pottery shaped as cylinders, pyramids, boxes and flasks of superb quality. “I just got tired of seeing the same shapes over and over,” she says. “A few years ago I made seed pots in a flat, circular form. Now I see them all over the place, so I stopped making them.”
She gathers her natural clays and slips from within the bounds of Acoma Pueblo lands. She’ll pulverize the clumps of clay to a fine powder, then sift the clay for pebbles and impurities. Then she processes with water and adds ground pottery shards for temper to make a fine workable medium. Once she has that she’ll begin to hand coil her vessels.
When the vessels are dry, she’ll sand them to remove any excess and to give the raw pottery a smooth finish that she will decorate with precise designs accented with colors derived from local plants (boiled-down Rocky Mountain bee-weed) and ground minerals.
“I try to always do the best work I can,” she says, “and it’s a challenge to be the best. Sometimes I feel there is not enough opportunity for up and coming artists. I think they’re having a harder time than we did a few years ago. But, it’s always good to see new artists coming up with new styles and taking different directions.”
When asked if she considers her work to be traditional or contemporary Charmae responds, “I’ve gotten a lot of my ideas from prehistoric pottery, like the ancient Mimbres designs, and from prehistoric Acoma pottery. Also from my grandmother’s pots. I’ve made canteens, bowls, bean pots, ladles and plates for ceremonial use. Those are traditional. But my designs are sometimes traditional and sometimes contemporary. Sometimes, too, I make pots that have designs which at first look similar, but if you look real close, you can tell differences. I suppose it comes from using similar design elements over the years. After awhile, it’s, like, hard-wired in your brain.”
Charmae is married to Thomas Natseway, the award-earning miniature artist from Laguna Pueblo. She signs her pottery as: “Charmae Shields Natseway, Acoma, N.M.”, followed by a corn stalk denoting her family clan.