Native American, Southwestern United States, Colorado or New Mexico, Ancestral Puebloan (Anasazi), Mesa Verde type, ca. 1100 to 1300 CE. A lovely bowl of a sizable form constructed via the coil and scrape technique. The broad, round-bottomed bowl has a stable base, gently swelling walls that taper to a thin rim, and a petite suspension loop along one side. The basin of this stark white vessel is adorned with thick, black-painted bands that form concentric stripes along the top and bottom as well as parallel bars with only a narrow, stepped strip separating them. The unadorned basin center and exterior walls add to the pleasant minimalism exemplified in this vessel. Size: 9.6" W x 5.625" H (24.4 cm x 14.3 cm)
Provenance: ex-private Southern California, USA collection, started in 1969; ex-Dr. John Hilsabeck estate, Orange County, California, USA, collected from the 1960s-1980s
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#167248
Condition
Repaired from roughly 20 pieces, with restoration to large areas of walls and basin center, and resurfacing, overpainting, and adhesive residue along new material and break lines. Abrasions and small chips to rim, walls, and base, and fading to areas of original pigment within basin. Nice preservation of original motifs within basin.