Water Jar (Olla) with Rainbird

Cleveland Museum of Art

Water Jar (Olla) with Rainbird

Date
1850–60
Medium
ceramic, slip
Culture
Native North America, Southwest, New Mexico, Zuni (A:shiwi) Pueblo
Department
Art of the Americas
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

Zuni (A:shiwi) women used ollas ( oy- ahs) like this one to collect, carry, and store water. The water well was a place for socializing, and the vessels’ public visibility may help to explain their elaborate, deftly painted decoration—here an abstract creature called the Rainbird whose beak spirals between two stylized, stepped wings that may allude to moisture-bearing clouds. Milford Nahohai, the contemporary Zuni potter, believes the motif is inspired by rain clouds that roll into the Zuni River Valley, their leading edges curled under the main mass to form a curve like that of the beak.

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