Past Exhibitions

A River Apart

October 19, 2008 through October 2, 2011

Jar Keresan Polychrome
Jar Keresan Polychrome Artist Unknown Ca. 1860 – 1880 35.3 x 36.4 Museum Purchase 11107

Jar Santo Domingo
Jar Santo Domingo Paulita Pacheco 1997 12.1 x 27.5 cm Gift of the Robert Nichols Gallery 55281

This exhibit is a fascinating case study in how cultures develop; how art, culture and community are interwoven; and how art is created, interpreted, valued, bought and sold.

Located along the central Rio Grande Valley in New Mexico and separated by that great river, Cochiti and Santo Domingo Pueblos shared a ceramic tradition for centuries until increasing contact with outsiders ushered in tumultuous changes that set the pueblos on divergent paths. Cochiti Pueblo more freely modified its traditional forms of painted pottery to appeal to new markets while the Santo Domingo Pueblo shunned the influences of the tourist trade and art market, continuing an artistic tradition that was conservative and insular.

A River Apart: the Pottery of Cochiti and Santo Domingo Pueblos, examines the pottery traditions of the two Pueblos to decipher what discoveries can be made and identities established through these representations of material culture. As the collection reveals, the pottery represents more than anthropological artifacts or art for the marketplace. From this exhibit we learn much about the Pueblos’ history, myths and legends, communities, and the various artists’ responses to influences from the outside world.



Bowl Cochiti
Bowl Cochiti Artist Unknown Ca. 1880 13.6 x 23.3 cm Museum Purchase Spanish and Indian Trading Company 7873




Now on Exhibit

The Buchsbaum Gallery of Southwestern Pottery

March 4, 2021 through March 4, 2026

Here, Now and Always

July 2, 2022 through July 2, 2028

Printing the Pueblo World: Juan Pino of Tay Tsu’geh Oweenge

December 15, 2024 through August 17, 2025