Pottery: vase

Dublin Core

Title

Pottery: vase

Subject

Cherokee pottery
Handicraft
Pottery

Description

This undated photograph, most likely made by the Indian Arts and Crafts Board, shows a blackware pottery vase made by Louise Bigmeat Maney (1932-2001). This vase, with added beads, was featured on the cover the brochure. “Designs in pottery by the Bigmeat Family,” that accompanied an exhibition of their work in 1979 (Identifier QACM_BigmeatPottery_01_01). Louise Bigmeat was raised on Wrights Creek in the Painttown community of Cherokee, North Carolina. A member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, she was a third-generation potter. While she was a young child, she and her two sisters began making pottery with their mother, Charlotte Welch Bigmeat (1887-1959). Louise Bigmeat married John Henry Maney and, together they established Bigmeat House of Pottery. In 1979, the Indian Arts and Crafts Board and Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual organized an exhibiton of pottery by the Bigmeat sisters; in 1998, Louise Bigmeat Maney received a North Carolina Folk Heritage Award.

Creator

Maney, Louise Bigmeat, 1932-2001
United States. Indian Arts and Crafts Board

Source

Photograph Collection

Publisher

Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723

Date

unknown

Rights

http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/

Format

jpg
photographs

Type

StillImage

Identifier

16459
https://southernappalachiandigitalcollections.org/object/16459

Date Created

2010-02-19

Rights Holder

All rights reserved. For permissions and use, contact Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual, Inc., Cherokee, NC 28719;

Spatial Coverage

Qualla Boundary
Appalachian Region, Southern

Extent

10" x 8"(dimension)

Is Part Of

Craft Revival

Collection

Citation

Maney, Louise Bigmeat, 1932-2001 and United States. Indian Arts and Crafts Board, “Pottery: vase,” OAI, accessed May 6, 2025, https://sadc.qi-cms.com/omeka/items/show/16459.