Vera Chino
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Vera Chino Ely (born June 27, 1943) is a Native American potter from Acoma Pueblo, New Mexico. She is the youngest daughter of Marie Z. Chino, who was also a potter. Vera learned from her mother.[1]
In the late 1970s she worked with her mother doing fine-line painting on some of her pots. In 1979, she participated in the "One Space: Three Visions" exhibition at the Albuquerque Museum. A collection of her works can be seen at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[2]
Vera's sisters, Carrie Charlie (b. 1925), Rose Garcia (b. 1928), and Grace Chino (c. Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".–1994), are all award-winning Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Acoma potters.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Further reading
- Dillingham, Rick - Fourteen Families in Pueblo Pottery. 1994.
- Schaaf, Gregory - Southern Pueblo Pottery: 2,000 Artist Biographies. 2002.
External links
- Vera Chino pottery, holmes.anthropology.museum; accessed January 26, 2016.
References
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Schrader, Julie Ann. (2005) "The Morgan collection of Southwest pottery website: research and photography: a project" (MA Thesis). Wichita State University. https://soar.wichita.edu//handle/10057/128
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- Dittert, Alfred E; Fred Plog (1980). Generations in Clay: Pueblo Pottery of the American Southwest. Flagstaff, AZ: Northland Press in cooperation with the American Federation of the Arts. ISBN 0873582713.
- Pages with script errors
- 1943 births
- American potters
- Living people
- People from Acoma Pueblo
- Ceramists from New Mexico
- Pueblo potters
- 20th-century American ceramists
- 20th-century American women artists
- Native American women potters
- American women potters
- 20th-century Native American artists
- 21st-century American ceramists
- 21st-century Native American artists
- 20th-century Native American women
- 21st-century Native American women
- 21st-century American women artists