Irwin A. Whitaker

A Potter’s Mexico

Gus & Emily’s Book on Mexican Pottery

A Potter’s Mexico

Publisher ‎University of New Mexico Press; First Edition (January 1, 1978) Language ‎English Hardcover ‎136 pages ISBN-10 ‎0826304729 ISBN-13 ‎978-0826304728

https://www.amazon.com/potters-Mexico-Irwin-Whitaker/dp/0826304729


A POTTER'S MEXICO by Irwin and Emily Whitaker, published by

University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 136 pages with 115

black-and-white and 40 color photographs. $17.50.

With great sympathy and appreciation, Irwin and Emily Whitaker

give the reader insight on the location, conditions of life, and

changing environment of the contemporary folk potters of Mexico.

The informative text is documented by excellent photographs.

According to the authors, "This book is an attempt to record . | |

a unique art form as it exists now and to plead for its survival."

They are convinced that study of Mexican pottery, with its diverse

techniques ranging from crudely primitive to highly sophisticated,

offers a "living compendium of ceramic history. In Mexico the 10th

and the 20th century lie side by side in the same connubial bed."

Firing, fuels, and kilns, clay forming and finishing, and decorative

processes are all covered. The everyday pottery, la loza corriente,

is discussed along with its intimate connection with the daily lives

of the people. The relationship of diet to pottery form and the his-tory

of dietary changes with the coming of the Spaniards are im-portant

facets in the evolution of pottery shapes. The book closes

with a section on "The Artists" in clay. A phenomenon growing

out of folk culture, these emerging individuals are bringing new life

to Mexican pottery, with their extensions from traditional to inno-vative

forms that express personal imagery. —MIKHAIL ZAKIN

Craft Horizons December 1978 (Volume 38, Number 8) P.12