enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: ancient american art pottery

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ceramics of Indigenous peoples of the Americas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramics_of_indigenous...

    Other ancient Amazonian ceramic traditions, Mina and Uruá-Tucumã featured shell- and sand-tempered pottery, that was occasionally painted red. Around 1000 CE, dramatic new ceramic styles emerged throughout Amazonia. Amazonian ceramics are geometric and linear in decoration. Polychrome pottery typically features red and black on white slips.

  3. Visual arts of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_arts_of_the...

    Native American jewelry; Native American pottery; Painting in the Americas before Colonization; Paraguayan indigenous art; Pre-Columbian art; Prehistoric art. List of Stone Age art; Timeline of Native American art history

  4. Pueblo pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo_pottery

    Ancestral Pueblo, Flagstaff black on white double jar, AD 1100–1200. Pueblo pottery are ceramic objects made by the Indigenous Pueblo people and their antecedents, the Ancestral Puebloans and Mogollon cultures in the Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico. [1]

  5. Mississippian culture pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippian_culture_pottery

    Mississippian culture pottery is the ceramic tradition of the Mississippian culture (800 to 1600 CE) found as artifacts in archaeological sites in the American Midwest and Southeast. It is often characterized by the adoption and use of riverine (or more rarely marine) shell-tempering agents in the clay paste.

  6. Pre-Columbian art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-Columbian_art

    Pre-Columbian art refers to the visual arts of indigenous peoples of the Caribbean, North, Central, and South Americas from at least 13,000 BCE to the European conquests starting in the late 15th and early 16th centuries.

  7. Maya ceramics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_ceramics

    The pottery of the Maya Early Classic dated from AD 250 to 550. The Maya soon began using polychrome slip paint, meaning they used many different colors to decorate the pots. This method of decoration became almost homogeneous for Mayan potters, thus signaling the beginning of the Classic Period.