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Huge Native American Salado Tonto Polychrome Jar

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Native American, Southwestern United States, Arizona, Tonto Basin, Salado culture, ca. 1340 to 1450 CE. A pleasing pottery jar hand-painted with attractive abstract designs in hues of black and beige on a red ground in the style known as Tonto Polychrome, Roosevelt Redware, or Salado Polychrome. Sitting upon a round yet stable base, the voluminous vessel presents a broad hip and sloped shoulder that tapers to a raised, annular rim. Elaborate geometric patterns, zigzagging stripes, eye-like diamonds, and stepped motifs create an eye-catching presentation suggesting flowing water or perhaps an allusion to the plumed serpent. Size: 16.5" Diameter x 11.1" H (41.9 cm x 28.2 cm)

Tonto Polychrome is a pottery type within the larger category referred to as Roosevelt Red Ware (or, more informally, "Salado Polychromes"). These pottery types first appeared in the mountains of central Arizona during the late 1200s, associated with clues suggesting that they were developed by immigrants from the Kayenta region of far northeastern Arizona. By the mid- to late 1300s, Tonto Polychrome and other Roosevelt Red Ware types were being produced in nearly every ancient community in the southern US Southwest, replacing local painted pottery traditions such as the red-on-buff and red-on-brown types associated with Hohokam groups. The available evidence suggests that the manufacture of Roosevelt Red Ware remained closely tied to northern immigrants and their descendants, who formed a diasporic community of dispersed but linked enclaves throughout central and southern Arizona, southwestern New Mexico, and northern Sonora and Chihuahua.

Please note this item may fall under the Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony Act and may not be eligible for international shipping. Native American, Alaska Native, & Native Hawaiian objects are only eligible to ship within the United States.

Provenance: private Reinsmoen collection, Clear Lake, Iowa, USA, acquired through descent from Robert Anderson, acquired prior to 2000

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#185025
Condition Report: Professionally repaired and restored with repainting in areas; all expertly done and difficult to notice. Light surface wear with a few nicks and abrasions as shown, but otherwise, excellent presentation with great pigments and nice preservation of decorative program.

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Native American, Southwestern United States, Arizona, Tonto Basin, Salado culture, ca. 1340 to 1450 CE. A pleasing pottery jar hand-painted with attractive abstract designs in hues of black and beige on a red ground in the style known as Tonto Polychrome, Roosevelt Redware, or Salado Polychrome. Sitting upon a round yet stable base, the voluminous vessel presents a broad hip and sloped shoulder that tapers to a raised, annular rim. Elaborate geometric patterns, zigzagging stripes, eye-like diamonds, and stepped motifs create an eye-catching presentation suggesting flowing water or perhaps an allusion to the plumed serpent. Size: 16.5" Diameter x 11.1" H (41.9 cm x 28.2 cm)

Tonto Polychrome is a pottery type within the larger category referred to as Roosevelt Red Ware (or, more informally, "Salado Polychromes"). These pottery types first appeared in the mountains of central Arizona during the late 1200s, associated with clues suggesting that they were developed by immigrants from the Kayenta region of far northeastern Arizona. By the mid- to late 1300s, Tonto Polychrome and other Roosevelt Red Ware types were being produced in nearly every ancient community in the southern US Southwest, replacing local painted pottery traditions such as the red-on-buff and red-on-brown types associated with Hohokam groups. The available evidence suggests that the manufacture of Roosevelt Red Ware remained closely tied to northern immigrants and their descendants, who formed a diasporic community of dispersed but linked enclaves throughout central and southern Arizona, southwestern New Mexico, and northern Sonora and Chihuahua.

Please note this item may fall under the Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony Act and may not be eligible for international shipping. Native American, Alaska Native, & Native Hawaiian objects are only eligible to ship within the United States.

Provenance: private Reinsmoen collection, Clear Lake, Iowa, USA, acquired through descent from Robert Anderson, acquired prior to 2000

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#185025
Condition Report: Professionally repaired and restored with repainting in areas; all expertly done and difficult to notice. Light surface wear with a few nicks and abrasions as shown, but otherwise, excellent presentation with great pigments and nice preservation of decorative program.

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Sale price
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Time, Location
26 Apr 2024
United States
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