Painted reflections : isomeric design in ancestral Pueblo pottery / Scott G. Ortman, Joseph Traugott
- Author:
- Ortman, Scott G., 1970-
- Published:
- Santa Fe : Museum of New Mexico Press, [2018]
- Copyright Date:
- ©2018
- Physical Description:
- 140 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 28 x 25 cm
- Additional Creators:
- Traugott, Joseph
- Contents:
- Perceiving isomeric design -- Isomeric design strategies -- Relationships between spiral and stepped elements -- Isomeric designs and weaving -- Isomeric designs and Pueblo philosophy -- Isomers, art, and society.
- Summary:
- "For the past two millennia the American Southwest has been home to one of the most vibrant and compelling peoples ever to have graced the earth. The vitality, distinctiveness, and resilience of Pueblo culture is apparent in its traditional pottery, a famous aspect of which is intricate painted designs. These designs, based on simple geometric forms, make Ancestral Pueblo pottery distinctive and easy to recognize. In this book, Scott G. Ortman and Joseph Traugott contemplate a hidden source of its appeal: a phenomenon they call isomeric design. The concept of isomeric design is based on an analogy with isomers in chemistry, which are chemically identical compounds that have mirror-image structures. In Ancestral Pueblo painting, isomeric design is the use of paired forms that can be perceived as reversible. These designs create optical illusions and figure-ground ambiguities that challenge conventional descriptions of Pueblo pottery. Presenting one hundred examples of Pueblo pottery from various museum collections in the Southwest, Painted Reflections takes a closer look at the psychology, history, and cultural significance of this unique aspect of Ancestral Pueblo painting, providing fascinating insights into the very foundations of Pueblo culture"--Provided by publisher.
- Subject(s):
- ISBN:
- 9780890136379 hardcover ; alkaline paper
0890136378 hardcover ; alkaline paper - Bibliography Note:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 131-133) and index.
View MARC record | catkey: 26774010