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P497 Hopi Bowl

Gloria Kahe
Price: $1,200.00
 
Description

Hopi bowl by award winning potter Gloria Kahe. This 8” x 5 ¼” hand coiled bowl depicts the Hopi's ascension to earth.

A spiraling line, beginning at the "spirit line”, winds around the pot as a pathway for the twenty Hopi clans within the pueblo. The clans represented on the pot are earth, sun, reed, deer, eagle, grasshopper, wolf, coyote, tobacco, rabbit, spider, roadrunner, butterfly, bear, snake, flute, fire, kachina, rain/lightning and corn. Other symbols include the gecko and kokopeli.The hand prints represent the Creator who is preparing for the Hopi’s emergence.

A “spirit line” or "spirit break" releases the spirit of the potter.

Gloria Kahe is a full blood Navajo who married into a family of Hopi potters. She learned the art of pottery making from her mother-in-law, renowned potter Marcella Kahe. Gloria has been making pottery since 1986. She specializes in traditional hand coiled and hand painted pottery with the traditional designs of the Hopi people. The materials all come from the reservation, and she does the firing outdoors in the traditional Hopi manner. Gloria lives in Polacca, the lower village, where many cross cultural families reside.

About the artist

Gloria Kahe

 (HopiNavajo/Diné)  b. 1951 - present

Gloria Kahe was born into the Navajo Nation in 1951 and is a member of the Water Clan. She is a Navajo who married Samuel Kahe, a Hopi from Polacca, the lower village at First Mesa. Samuel Kahe is a member of a Hopi family of famous potters. Gloria learned from one of the respected masters of clay of the Hopi reservation, her mother-in-law, the Arizona Living Treasure, Marcella Kahe and has been making pottery since 1986. Gloria is so steeped in Hopi tradition that she and her family have been accepted as Hopi potters for years.  Even authorities on Hopi pottery list Gloria Kahe among the Hopi potters because she is married into the Hopi tribe and because she adheres to the traditional ways.

Her pottery is Hopi in materials, hand-coiling technique, hand-painting, hand polishing and appearance. She has developed her own designs on pottery so she can establish a style all her own. Her cross cultural influences and fine workmanship cause her pottery to be in demand.

She has branched away from Hopi-style Sikyatki designs by incorporating symbols and imagery from her Dine’ culture but continues to use the recognizable orange slip so common to many Sikyatki pots.  Some of her pottery displays Dine’ spirit figures called “Yeis”. These Yei or “Holy People” figures are found in Navajo sand paintings and on Navajo rugs mostly from the Four Corners region. She still resides in Polacca, the lower village, where many cross cultural families live.

Gloria signs her pottery: G. Kahe. She is related to Samuel Kahe (husband) and Valerie Kahe (daughter). She is also the sister-in-law of famed Hopi potter Karen Charley.

Gloria is listed in Gregory Schaaf's HOPI-TEWA POTTERY. More of her work can be seen on page 12 and on the back cover of Southwestern Pottery, Anasazi to Zuni, by Allan Hayes and John Blom.

About Bischoff's

Bischoff's Gallery opened in 1999. The gallery, located in historic Old Town Scottsdale, Arizona carries work by Native American, western, and southwestern artists. Known for its collection of Native American Jewelry, Bischoff's also offers a selection of Navajo rugs, kachinas, pottery, baskets, and fine art from artisans of many tribes...

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Bischoff's Gallery

3925 N Brown Ave • Scottsdale, AZ • 85251

Phone: 480-946-6155

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