Select Page

Collections

Collections Menu
Photograph by Addison Doty. Copyright 2010 School for Advanced Research.

Water jar | K'yabokya de'ele

Photograph by Addison Doty. Copyright 2010 School for Advanced Research.

Water jar | K'yabokya de'ele

Date: c. 1925
Artist or Maker: Unknown
Dimensions:
Dimensions: 25.4 × 28 cm (10 × 11 in.)
Weight: 2 kg (4.45 lb.)
Medium: clay | paints
Place Made:
Zuni Pueblo, McKinley County, New Mexico, Southwest, United States, North America
Object Number: IAF.1242
Not on view
DescriptionPolychrome jar with high rolled neck and globular body. Neck band divided into six panels. Four contain stepped key motifs with "eyes". Two contain scallops enclosing linked arches. The main body is decorated with a continuous hatched band forming "H" and "V" and crescent shapes. Negative spaces embellished with winged creature and split rectangles with "eyes".
Tribal Collection Review RemarksJim Enote and Octavius Seowtewa during collection review visit April 6 and 7, 2009 (Events Record “Collection Review: Zuni Tribe, Review 1”): This jar is not ceremonial. Though it is classified on the catalog card as Pseudo-Ceremonial, it should no longer be classified this way because it was not made with the intention of making the item appear ceremonial. The vertical design segments are atypical for Zuni ceramics. It is just a water jar made to look old. A note in the IAF pottery catalog says the jar was "Used by Parrot Clan." There is a Macaw Clan, which many people mistakenly call the Parrot Clan. However, they would not use this type of jar for ceremony.

The word for a water jar in Zuni is “k'yabokya de'ele,” which translates to “water container vessel” in English. The intended use for these jars was to store and carry water, but they could also be used to store other items.
In Collection(s)
Bibliography:
The Indian Arts Research Center, in collaboration with Native American community scholars, strives to present accurate collections records. Records may be updated as new information becomes available and is reviewed with the Native American community having cultural affinity to particular items. Please write to iarc@sarsf.org if you have questions or concerns related to the documentation.