Mimbres Painted PotteryThe Mimbres cultural florescence between about AD 1000 and AD 1140 remains one of the most visually astonishing and anthropologically intriguing questions in Southwest prehistory. In this revised edition, noted Mimbres scholar Dr. J.J. Brody incorporates the extensive fieldwork done since the original publication in 1977, updating his discussion of village life, the larger world in which the Mimbres people lived, and how the art that they practiced illuminates these wider issues. He addresses human and animal iconography, the importance of perspective and motion in perceiving Mimbres artistry, and the technology used to produce the ceramics. This lively, engaging work will interest archaeologists, art historians, and all people who enjoy the beauty of Mimbres pottery. Featuring over one hundred new illustrations and insights drawn from a lifetime of study and contemplation, this book is much more than a revised edition; it establishes a new standard for the artistic interpretation of a classic Southwestern culture for the new century. |
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amateur excavator Anasazi animal archaeology architecture Arizona Berry Bowen bird Cameron Creek canyons Casas Grandes century Cochise Collection complex contemporary Cosgrove decorative defined donation Earl Morris earlier effigy excavated by Berry Fewkes figurative paintings fish forms Fred Stimson geometric Gila Gladwin Grants County Haury Hohokam human iconography Indian arts insects later lines lower Mimbres Valley Mexico MimbreƱos Mimbres art Mimbres Black-on-white bowl Mimbres Branch Mimbres painting Mimbres Phase Mimbres pottery Mimbres River Mimbres territory Mogollon branches Mogollon Culture motifs mountains Museum nonfigurative northern painted pottery patterns period photograph pictorial picture spaces Pine Lawn pithouse placed polychrome pots pottery painting prior history Private n/a production Pueblo purchase rabbit region representational paintings Richard Eisele Rinaldo San Simon SAR/MNM similar slip social Sonoran Desert Southwest structural surface Swarts Ruin tradition usually vessel villages visual WNMU