Currently not on view
Female effigy vessel,
1350–1450
Cliff Salado Bowls
Salado culture emerged around A.D. 1100, through migrations of Mogollon, Hohokam, and Ancestral Puebloan peoples into this area of southwest Arizona. The Salado artistic style became widely popular and was emulated throughout the region. The vessel in the form of a human female is an extremely rare type. Its rippled surface was produced by pinching the coils of clay as the object was being formed, then patting the clay to soften the texture. Painted designs may suggest body paint or tattoos. The larg bowl displayed above represents a type of Salado ceramic, known as Cliff Polychrome. Cliff bowls are distinctive from other Salado vessels in that they implement a re-curve to the vessel wall just below the rim.
Information
1350–1450
North America, United States, Arizona, Tonto Basin
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Michael Mulberger, Ageless Images of Southwestern Pre-Historic Pottery (Scottsdale: Land O’ Sun Printers, 1980).
, back cover (illus.) -
Barbara L. Moulard, Within the Underworld Sky: Mimbres Ceramic Art in Context (Pasadena: Twelvetree Press, 1984).
, pl. 77 - "Acquisitions of the Princeton University Art Museum 2015," Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 75/76 (2016-17): 102-125., p. 116 (illus.)