Alice Cling
Alice Williams Cling | |
|---|---|
| Born | Alice Williams March 21, 1946 |
| Other names | Alice Williams Cling |
| Education | Intermountain Indian School |
| Occupations | Navajo potter Ceramicist |
| Years active | 1976-present |
Alice Williams Cling (Navajo, born March 21, 1946)[1] is a Native American ceramist and potter known for creating beautiful and innovative pottery that has a distinctive rich reds, purples, browns and blacks that have a polished and shiny exteriors, revolutionizing the functional to works of art.[1][2] Critics have argued that she is the most important Navajo potter of the last 25 years.[3][4]
Early life
[edit | edit source]Cling was born in Cow Springs, Arizona, in the Tonalea area of the Navajo Nation.[1][2]
In 1966, Cling graduated from the Intermountain Indian School in Brigham City, Utah.[1][5]
Career
[edit | edit source]Cling learned the craft of pottery from her mother, Rose Williams, and her great-aunt, Grace Barlow. The pots are created from clay found near the Black Mesa area in Apache-Navajo Counties in Arizona, and are then fired outdoors using juniper wood, with the firing process enhancing the clay's natural pigments.[6] Cling and her mother and aunt were responsible for revitalizing traditional Navajo pottery.[7]
Cling is a coil potter, and was the first Navajo potter to use a smooth river stone to polish her pots instead of the traditional corncob.[8][9] Her pottery is considered non-utilitarian, which represented a huge shift from function to art.[2][10]
In 1978, Cling's work was selected by Joan Mondale and featured in the vice-presidential mansion in Washington, D.C. and she was honored with the Arizona Indian Living Treasures Award in 2006. Cling's work is in the collection of the Smithsonian.[11]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]Cling learned her pottery skills from her mother, master potter Rose Williams.[1][12] She lived across the highway from her mother in Shonto, Arizona.[1] Following in the family tradition, Cling's daughters are also artists, as are her sisters, Sue Ann Williams, and Susie Williams Crank.[5]
Cling married Jervis "Jerry" Cling shortly after graduating from high school.[1] They had four children.[2] She works and lives in the Shonto-Cow Springs area in Arizona.[1]
Collections
[edit | edit source]- Amerind Foundation, Dragoon, AZ
- Arizona State Museum, Tempe, AZ[2]
- Heard Museum, Phoenix, AZ[2]
- Millicent Rogers Museum, Taos, NM[2]
- Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ<[2]
- Spencer Museum of Art, Lawrence, KS[13]
Awards
[edit | edit source]- 2006: Arizona Indian Living Treasures Award[14]
Selected works
[edit | edit source]- Wedding Vase with Braided Handles at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, 1987
- Pot with Incised Geometric Decoration at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, 1988
References
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Further reading
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- Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value). – Published in conjunction with an exhibition held at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C., Oct. 9, 1997-Jan. 11, 1998 and at the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Feb. 18-Apr. 18, 1998
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External links
[edit | edit source]- Alice Cling at Women Artists of the American West, Purdue University
- Alice Cling at Smithsonian American Art Museum
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- 1946 births
- Living people
- Navajo artists
- Native American potters
- American potters
- Native American women potters
- People from Coconino County, Arizona
- American women potters
- 21st-century American ceramists
- 20th-century American ceramists
- 20th-century Native American artists
- 21st-century Native American artists
- 20th-century Native American women artists
- 21st-century Native American women artists
- Navajo women artists
- Ceramists from Arizona