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Maria Martinez and Santana Martinez

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Maria Martinez and Santana Martinez
Indigenous American: Po-woh-ge-oweenge (San Ildefonso) San Ildefonso Pueblo
Indigenous American: Po-woh-ge-oweenge (San Ildefonso), (1887–1980)
Born at the San Ildefonso Pueblo, Martinez began practicing pottery at a young age, initially learning from her aunt. The popularity of her and her husband’s pottery took off after a 1908 archaeological expedition uncovered prehistoric Pueblo pottery. Her popularity as an artist would lead Martinez to eventually hold a maternal role in her community, helping her forge friendly relationships with the soldiers and scientists of the Manhattan Project when they came to Los Alamos. This included her son, Popovi Da, who worked on the Manhattan Project as a machinist. Martinez’s openness was crucial to developing relationships between the Project and the indigenous people of New Mexico.

In 1973, she received the initial grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to found a Martinez pottery workshop.


Artist Objects

Vessel 1997.034


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