NEWS
Native American Heritage Month: Maria and Julian Martinez
Sheen black pear-shaped pot with matte black geometric design on the upper half of the pot.
Maria Martinez, no title, no date. Signature reads, "Marie."

In honor of Native American Heritage Month, we are featuring Indigenous artists and their work that we hold in our permanent collection on our blog, social media, and Collection Highlight E-Newsletters. Our intention is to both recognize the varied contributions of Indigenous artists while acknowledging how their works are disproportionately underrepresented in museum collections nationwide, including here at WAM.

We are in the process of editing our land acknowledgement statement to additionally address the active work the museum is doing in support of Native American arts and Indigenous communities here in the Twin Cities. Our current statement reads:

The Weisman Art Museum acknowledges the Dakota peoples on whose land we are on. We thank them and their relatives for their care of the land, and we recognize their continuing connection to the land, waters, and community. We pay our respects to them and their culture; both past and present.

Read on to learn more about the practices of Maria and Julian Martinez, two ceramicists who worked within traditional Pueblo pottery styles to create breathtaking, experimental works that helped elevate Native American pottery from functional craft to fine art.

Sheen black pear-shaped pot with matte black geometric design on the upper half of the pot.
Maria Martinez, no title, no date. Signature reads, "Marie."

Of Tewa heritage, Maria Martinez (1887–1980) and her husband Julian (Pocano) Martinez (1879–1943) were tribal members of the San Ildefonso Pueblo in the Rio Grande Valley of New Mexico, just 20 miles north of Santa Fe. Before Maria became one of the most influential potters of the 20th century, she watched her aunt and grandmother make pottery for storage, cooking, and ceremonial use—a communal and traditionally female practice. Maria gained a reputation for her thin and high-quality pots and was sought out by archaeologist and anthropologist Edgar Lee Hewett.

In 1909, Hewett obtained broken pieces of 17th century black biscuit ware from an excavation which took place on a pueblo site near San Ildefonso. As the director of the Museum of New Mexico, he asked Maria to recreate full-scale pieces for museum examples. After a long process of experimentation and trial and error, she and Julian revitalized this ancient style of pueblo pottery and became influential in moving Native American pottery from functional craft to fine art. As Maria formed each piece, and Julian decorated each surface, they became widely known for their matte-black-on-sheen-black pottery.

Maria received many awards and honorary doctorates from University of Colorado and New Mexico State University, and notably received the initial grant for the National Endowment of the Arts to fund a Martinez pottery workshop in 1973.

Black sheen plate with matte black geometric and symmetric design in the center and extending outwards, covering the surface of the plate.
Maria Martinez, no title, circa 1943 – 1954, earthenware. Signature reads, "Marie + Santana."
Julian Martinez, San Ildefonso Pueblo black on black jar, 20th century, earthenware with black on black slip design. Signature on the bottom reads, "Marie/Julian."
Julian Martinez, San Ildefonso Pueblo black on black jar, 20th century, earthenware with black on black slip design. Signature on the bottom reads, "Marie/Julian."
Cream colored pot with geometric black and red design covering the upper two-thirds of the pot.
Julian Martinez, no title, no date. Signature reads, "Marie and Julian." 
Cream colored pot with geometric black and red design covering the entire surface of the pot.
Maria Martinez, no title, no date. Signature reads, "Marie."

Pottery Process

Finding and collecting clay, forming the vessel, scraping and sanding the surface to remove irregularities, and applying an iron-bearing clay slip, are the first of many steps in the Martinez’s pottery process. The pot is then scraped, sanded, and polished with stones—called “burnishing,” the most time-consuming part of the process. A second clay slip is then applied by painting onto the burnished surface. Julian decorated the surface of the pots with motifs of birds, serpents, and other animals. He often painted the Avanyu, a Tewa deity and guardian of water. The Avanyu is represented as a horned serpent, a frequent motif in Native American pottery across the Southwest.

After decorating, the pot is ready for firing. By smothering a cool fire with dried cow manure, the trapped smoke and low temperature transforms a red-clay pot to black—it’s sheen surface contrasting with decorative matte motifs.

 

Signatures

Maria and Julian’s oldest works dating from around 1918 – 1923 are all unsigned due to the traditional functional and communal nature of pottery making in the Pueblo. Once the Martinez's pieces gained exposure and success as fine art pieces, Maria began signing the work with “Marie,” and soon after, “Marie + Julian.” Following Julian’s death in 1943, the Martinez family continued the pottery practice, and Maria worked closely with her daughter-in-law, Santana, and son, Popovi Da, to carry on the work.

 

Resources

“Maria Martinez (1887-1980) Biography: Medicine Man Gallery.” Medicinemangallery.com. Accessed November 18, 2019.

“Maria Martinez Pottery Signatures - King Galleries - Scottsdale & Santa Fe.” King Galleries - Exceptional Pueblo Pottery & Native Art. Accessed November 18, 2019.

Peterson, Susan. The Living Tradition of María Martínez. Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1989.