Nambe
About Nambé Pueblo
Nambé Pueblo was settled in the early 1300s when a group of Ancestral Puebloans (Anasazi) made their way from what is now the Bandelier National Monument area closer to the Rio Grande in search of more reliable water sources and more arable land.
At first they settled mostly high in the mountains, coming down to the river valleys in the summer to grow crops. Eventually, they felt safe enough to stay in the valleys and slowly abandoned the high mountain villages.
When the Spanish first arrived, Nambé was a primary economic, cultural and religious center for the area. That attracted a large Spanish presence and the nature of that presence caused the Nambé people to join wholeheartedly in the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 to throw out the Spanish oppressors.
When the Spanish returned in 1692, their rule was significantly less harsh. However, the Spanish brought horses into the New World and as the number of Spanish increased, so did the number of horses. That brought more and more raids from the Comanches as they came for horses and whatever else they could carry away. The Comanches were finally subdued by Governor Juan Bautista de Anza in 1776 but by then, the impact of European diseases was being strongly felt. A smallpox epidemic in the late 1820s virtually ended the making of pottery at Nambé.
Photo courtesy of John Phelan, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License
About the Pottery of Nambé Pueblo
The Nambé Pueblo pottery tradition is similar to that of Taos and Picuris Pueblos in their use of micaceous clay slips but Nambé potters also used to produce white-on-red and black-on-black products. When Lonnie Vigil began producing his micaceous clay masterpieces about 25 years ago, he almost single-handedly jump-started the revival of pottery making in the pueblo.
These days, virtually every piece of pottery made at Nambé is slipped with micaceous clay before being fired. The only question then is: black, golden or a mix? That's dependent on how you build the fire and how windy it is when you light it.
Today there are a few potters making micaceous pottery at Nambé and while the general quality level is quite high, the production level is low.
Showing all 12 results
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Lonnie Vigil, rcna3d196, Golden micaceous jar with fire clouds
$4,900.00 Add to cart -
Lonnie Vigil, spna2l080, Golden micaceous shallow bowl with scalloped rim and fire clouds
$2,200.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna2m060, Micaceous black bowl
$225.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna2m200, Micaceous black bowl with sgraffito bear paw
$325.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna2m290, Micaceous black bowl
$375.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna3a050, Micaceous black double shoulder jar
$265.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna3a100, Golden micaceous double shoulder bowl
$275.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna3a130, Micaceous black jar
$295.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna3b020, Micaceous black jar
$250.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna3b100, Micaceous black jar with a geometric design
$775.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna3b230, Micaceous black double shouldered jar
$695.00 Add to cart -
Robert Vigil, zzna3d180, Bowl with avanyu design
$385.00 Add to cart
Showing all 12 results