Ida Sahmie

Buckskin Offering

4 1/4" H x 5" D



Ida Sahmie (Navajo) the wife of Andrew Sahmie (Hopi), and the daugther-in-law of Priscilla Namingha Nampeyo. She was born in 1960 and has been an active potter since 1990.

Her favorite designs are Yei-like figures. She has been described in Hopi-Tewa Pottery: 500 Artists Biographies by Gregory Schaff:

"Ida Sahmie is a Navajo woman who is married into a Tewa family. She has learned how to make pots in the technique and style of Hopi-Tewa potters. However, she prefers to use Navajo designs, especially Navajo Yeis, spiritual 'Holy People.'"

Along with her appearance in Hopi-Tewa Pottery: 500 Artists Biographies by Gregory Schaff (p. 143), Ida is also featured in Fourteen Families in Pueblo Pottery (p. 48), and in The Legacy of a Master Potter: Nampeyo and Her Descendants by Mary Ellen and Laurence Blair (p. 188).

Although her work has drawn criticism from both the Hopi-Tewa and Navajo communities, Ida maintains her comittment to her artwork and continues to push forward with clean and consistent pieces.

Ida is quoted in Fourteen Families: " Personally, I feel I have a unique talent with pottery. It's a combination of both Hopi and Navajo, though I feel it should be more Navajo because I am a Navajo. I want to stick with more Navajo designs. The Yei figures are the most popular for me, secondly would be the rug designs, and third the sand painting designs."

This piece depicts her classic "dancing" scene on black backdrop. Her polychrome desings are clean and clear. Her attention to detail is unsurpassed. One look at a piece by Ida Sahmie, and you know you're looking at a work of art.

Gallery Price: $1,375.00

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