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Book Cover for: Talking with the Clay: The Art of Pueblo Pottery in the 21st Century, 20th Anniversary Revised Edition, Stephen Trimble

Talking with the Clay: The Art of Pueblo Pottery in the 21st Century, 20th Anniversary Revised Edition

Stephen Trimble

When you hold a Pueblo pot in your hands, you feel a tactile connection through the clay to the potter and to centuries of tradition. You will find no better guide to this feeling than Talking with the Clay. Stephen Trimble's photographs capture the spirit of Pueblo pottery in its stunning variety, from the glittering micaceous jars of Taos Pueblo to the famous black ware of San Ildefonso Pueblo, from the bold black-on-white designs of Acoma Pueblo to the rich red and gold polychromes of the Hopi villages. His portraits of potters communicate the elegance and warmth of these artists, for this is the potters' book. Revealed through dozens of conversations, their stories and dreams span seven generations and more than a century, revealing how pottery making helps bridge the gap between worlds, between humans and clay, springing from old ways but embracing change. In this revised, expanded, and redesigned edition, Trimble brings his classic into the twenty-first century with interviews and photographs from a new generation of potters working to preserve the miraculous balance between tradition and innovation.

Book Details

  • Publisher: School for Advanced Research Press
  • Publish Date: Jul 18th, 2007
  • Pages: 160
  • Language: English
  • Edition: Anniversary - 0020
  • Dimensions: 10.10in - 8.50in - 0.50in - 1.30lb
  • EAN: 9781930618787
  • Categories: Pottery & CeramicsIndigenous Art of the Americas

Praise for this book

"This twenty-first century revised edition of Steve Trimble's Talking with the Clay expands his comprehensive work on Pueblo pottery to include contemporary artists. As with his earlier piece, which offers profound understanding of Pueblo pottery, this work offers intuitive insight into those who are carrying on the tradition today. The potters, both past and present, are talking with the clay. In this book, Steve Trimble listens, and through a lifetime of study and acquired knowledge, conveys the conversation." -- Diego Romero