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Olla (water jar)

Native American, Acoma Pueblo
1880–1900
Object Place: Acoma, New Mexico, United States, Southwest

Medium/Technique Earthenware with slip paint
Dimensions 29.8 cm (11.75 in.)
Credit Line Museum purchase with funds donated by Anne and Joseph P. Pellegrino
Accession Number1988.290
CollectionsAmericas
ClassificationsCeramicsPotteryEarthenware

DescriptionBlack and red slip decoration with white ground on coil-built earthenware water jar. Geometric designs painted in a four-part arrangement involving checkerboard chevrons, fine line striping, and stylized foliate bird ornament. Base colored black; rim ringed in black. Interior rim colored one third down with red clay slip; rest of interior white.
ProvenanceLate 19th/early 20th century, probably acquired by either Alfred Wayland Cutting (b. 1860 - d. 1935), Wayland, MA, or Francis Bacon Sears (b. 1882 - d. 1943), Weston, MA, and passed by descent to Edwin B. Sears (b. 1911 - d. 1987), Woburn, MA [see note]; May 14-15, 1988, consigned by the Sears estate, Northeast Auctions, Hampton, NH, lot 226, to the MFA. (Accession Date: May 25, 1988)

NOTE: The jar is thought to have been acquired either by Sears's great-uncle, Alfred Cutting, who traveled to Santa Fe in 1885 and made purchases at Gold's Trading Post, or his father, Francis Sears, who traveled to the American Southwest in 1904.