| Tom was raised by her grandmother
on the vast Navajo Reservation. She spent her childhood watching
the great skills of her grandmother as she made pottery and Tom
began making pottery herself in the mid-1990s. When her
fascination with traditional Anasazi designs took hold the
delicate and laborious tasks of pottery making grew
exponentially more challenging for this dedicated artist. Every
pot is hand coiled in traditional fashion; every one is fired in
temperatures up to 2,000 degrees; and every one is completely
painted, intricately, by hand.
The haunting beauty of Anasazi black
on white pottery is a timeless legacy of the prehistoric
Southwest. The vibrant geometric designs are easily recognized
and yet decorated pots were not common in prehistoric times;
usually, they comprise only about 5-40 percent of the potsherds
found at any given site. They were considered very fine wares,
were highly valued and were reserved for special uses. Today,
the new pottery being made that follows these ancient traditions
is more treasured than ever; the pots made by Bertha Tom
generally range in size from medium (approx. 11”h x 12”w) to
ones that are quite large (approx. 16”h x 15”w). The intricacy
of the traditional designs she follows can mean weeks spent
painting a single vessel. |