Considered a matriarch of
the remaining Nampeyo family, Tonita is the eldest daughter of
Fannie Nampeyo, and grand-daughter to the legendary Nampeyo who
was credited as being instrumental in the revitalization of Hopi
polychrome pottery.
In the footsteps of her forebears,
Tonita stays true to her traditional roots, preferring to do
everything the "old way." Her clay is still dug from
deposits near her home. She still hand-coils and hand polishes
every piece she does. Tonita remains loyal to many of the original
Sikyatki ruins designs, as can be seen here in this beautiful
water vessel.
The designs appear on both
sides of the vase, and you can see from the photo preceding this
description, that the pottery is quite large. Tonita is holding
it gracefully here. The rich orange and brown colors are achieved
through a traditional process of pigmentation where natural vegetal
and mineral dyes are used.
Tonita is world-renown and
appears in nearly every publication dealing with Hopi pottery.
Her work has been exhibited in galleries and museums across the
globe, and she has shown and placed at nearly every major venue
throughout the Southwest.
Her work appears in Fourteen
Families in Pueblo Pottery by Rick Dillingham, The Art
of the Hopi by Jerry Jacka, and Hopi-Tewa Pottery: 500
Artists Biographies by Gregory Schaff as well as others.