Honoring the traditions of people and place
Top image: Carmel Lewis Haskaya enjoying the Colorado outdoors while she was a CU 抖阴传媒在线 student (Photo: Lewis family)
Newly opened exhibit at the University of Colorado Museum celebrates ceramic artist鈥檚 donation and the legacy of her family and community
A new piece of Acoma Pueblo pottery begins, in a way, with all the pottery that came before it.
Artisans finely grind shards of old pottery and mix it into clay gathered from Acoma Pueblo land, hand-forming the light yet strong vessels for which they are renowned. There are no precise measurements, no written recipes, for the clay or slip or mineral paints that come together in Acoma Pueblo pottery; 鈥測ou just know when it鈥檚 right,鈥 says artist Dolores Lewis Garcia.
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Noted Acoma Pueblo ceramics artist Carmel Lewis Haskaya, a proud CU 抖阴传媒在线 alumnus, ensured that her love for her community and its traditions would unite with her love for CU 抖阴传媒在线 by donating one of her pieces to the University of Colorado Museum.
Lewis Garcia learned the art from her mother, Lucy M. Lewis, the famed New Mexico ceramics artist known for reviving traditional pottery techniques in the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian. Most of Lewis鈥 nine children learned by watching her and also became ceramic artists, including her youngest, Carmel Lewis Haskaya.
Lewis Haskaya was not only a respected ceramic artist, but a proud 抖阴传媒在线 alumnus. Before her death in 2019, she ensured that her love for her community and its traditions would unite with her love for CU 抖阴传媒在线 by donating one of her pieces to the University of Colorado Museum.
The vibrant cylindrical pot is a centerpiece of the new exhibit 鈥A Family Tradition: Acoma pottery, CU and the Lewis family,鈥 which opened with a reception and ribbon cutting Tuesday evening.
鈥淲e are delighted to highlight and honor the important artworks that this family has shared with us,鈥 says Nancy J. Stevens, CU 抖阴传媒在线 professor of anthropology and director of the Museum Institute. 鈥淚t represents a pivotal point for connecting communities and growing meaningful collaborations into the future.鈥
The exhibit features pieces by Lucy Lewis and many of her children, including Forever Buff Carmel Lewis Haskaya.
鈥(Lewis Haskaya鈥檚 cylinder jar) is not just an object or a gift,鈥 explains William Taylor, a CU 抖阴传媒在线 assistant professor of anthropology and CU Museum curator of archaeology who partnered with the Lewis family to create the exhibit.
鈥For many folks, creating pottery is a way to impart something of yourself in a permanent and lasting way. Having this pottery at CU means that a part of Carmel and her family will always be here in 抖阴传媒在线.鈥
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Lewis Haskaya belonged to an artistic lineage that can be traced in centuries. For hundreds of years, Acoma Pueblo artists have gone to certain spots on their land to collect the clay, white slip, wild spinach and oxides that are the raw materials for their pottery.
鈥淏eing an Acoma potter, there鈥檚 a lot of work that goes into it,鈥 Lewis Garcia says.
鈥淓verything is gathered from the land and hand-processed,鈥 adds Claudia Mitchell, also a famed Acoma Pueblo artist and Lewis鈥 granddaughter. 鈥淚t teaches you to take your time and be present; you鈥檙e putting yourself into the work.鈥
As a child, Lewis Haskaya learned these traditions and techniques watching her mother. When she came to CU 抖阴传媒在线 through the American Indian Educational Opportunity Program and built a career with the Native American Rights Fund, she never forgot or outgrew her community, Mitchell says. Eventually, Lewis Haskaya returned to her community at Acoma, west of Albuquerque, New Mexico, and became an accomplished artist.
Lewis Haskaya was a student of history and art traditions from around the world and was known for creating cylinder vessels in the style of ones found at Chaco Canyon, Mesa Verde and other ancient sites, adding her own touch to traditional designs.

The cylindrical vessel made by noted Acoma Pueblo artist Carmel Lewis Haskaya, which she donated to the University of Colorado Museum before her death in 2019.
鈥淪he had the hardest time grinding mineral paints,鈥 Lewis Garcia recalls with a laugh, adding that her sister eventually conquered the hurdle that many artisans using traditional techniques encounter.
Like her mother and siblings, and now her nieces and nephews, Lewis Haskaya walked Acoma land to specific spots for the gray and yellow clays, the minerals and the plants that are the foundation of traditional techniques. 鈥淭o get the white slip, it鈥檚 not in an easy place,鈥 Lewis Garcia says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 underground and there鈥檚 a big boulder on it. You have to use it sparingly.鈥
Though it鈥檚 more common now to use kilns rather than dung fires, the process of thinning vessel walls, of burnishing with a stone, of applying the geometric patterns associated with Acoma Pueblo pottery hasn鈥檛 changed for centuries.
鈥楾he ties that bind us together鈥
While pottery is revered as art, 鈥渋n our traditional ways, it鈥檚 a utility, it鈥檚 an item that we use,鈥 says Benny Shendo Jr., CU 抖阴传媒在线 associate vice chancellor for Native American affairs and a member of the Jemez Pueblo Tribe. 鈥淎nd it plays a big role in our ceremonial life.鈥
Mitchell notes that traditional pottery helps not only those who make it, but those who use it to 鈥済round ourselves to the place that we鈥檙e from; it鈥檚 that connection that we have to our land and to our people鈥攏ot only just for personal use, but for community use. It gives us that tie to one another. We鈥檙e keeping those traditions alive not only through our dance and song but through our pottery.
鈥淭hose are the ties that bind us together, that make us a people. It鈥檚 important to keep those ties, to make sure that those things鈥攖he pottery making, the dancing, the singing鈥攁ll of those are taught to our younger generations, because that helps them identify who they are and where they are. It helps give them a sense of place and sense of purpose.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 part of life,鈥 says Diana Lim Garry (Anth'71), Lucy Lewis鈥 granddaughter who lives in 抖阴传媒在线 and helped bring the exhibit to life, loaning pieces from her own collection. 鈥淓verywhere we go鈥攜ou鈥檙e walking on a hike and you鈥檙e walking along the streambed, and you鈥檙e saying, 鈥榃ould that make a good polishing stone?鈥 You go along, even (in) roadcuts there鈥檚 all these pretty colors of the minerals in the rocks: 鈥榃ould that make good paint?鈥 It鈥檚 always on your mind that this is something that鈥檚 been done for a long time and will continue to be done thanks to my aunts and my cousins.鈥
Mitchell adds that a pottery vessel made in traditional ways allows the Acoma Pueblo people to say 鈥淚 have my piece of the rock. That鈥檚 how we identify ourselves, by place and name, that鈥檚 our place in this world, and no matter where we go in this world, we can always go back to that one place, and that鈥檚 where we belong. For our people, that鈥檚 who we are, that鈥檚 where we鈥檙e from.鈥
"A Family Tradition: Acoma pottery, CU and the Lewis family鈥 is open to the public during regular museum hours, which are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

Claudia Mitchell (left), Dolores Lewis Garcia (center) and Diana Lim Garry (right) with the vessel made by Carmel Lewis Haskaya, Lewis Garcia's sister and Mitchell's and Lim Garry's aunt; Lewis Haskaya donated the vessel to the University of Colorado Museum.

Pieces made by famed Acoma Pueblo artist Lucy M. Lewis are part of the new University of Colorado Museum exhibit "A Family Tradition: Acoma pottery, CU and the Lewis family."

Following in the footsteps of her grandmother, Lucy M. Lewis, Acoma Pueblo artist Claudia Mitchell made these pieces using traditional techniques and designs.
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