|
MOUNDVILLE, Ala. – Dozens of the country’s finest Southeastern Indian
potters will gather at The University of Alabama’s Moundville Archaeological
Park for “Fusing Red Earth,” Moundville’s first pottery gathering
and expo, Wednesday, June 23 through Saturday, June 26, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
“Southwestern pottery and other art works tend to dominate the cultural art
world,” said Betsy Gilbert, education outreach coordinator at UA’s Moundville
Archaeological Park. “But the purpose of this gathering is to highlight the
significance of ceramics created by prehistoric, historic, and modern Southeastern
Indians who did, or still do, inhabit our region.”
Registered participants will see both original prehistoric and historic indigenous
collections and hear presentations on the evolution of prehistoric Indian ceramics
by museum associates, guest artists, and scholars. “Fusing Red Earth” will
also include a trip to the Ft. Toulouse/Ft. Jackson state historic site to experience
UA’s annual Alabama Museum of Natural History Expedition, an archaeological
excavation in progress in Wetumpka.
Saturday’s program will include demonstrations by Native Americans and other
experts for hand making and firing Southeastern Indian pottery using a variety of
techniques. The nation’s best historic and prehistoric pottery reproductions,
as well as modern art works based on Southeastern Indian art traditions, will be available
for purchase during the exposition.
To attend the four-day meeting, the cost is $35 each. To register, phone UA’s
Moundville Archaeological Park at 205/371-2234, or see details online at www.moundville.ua.edu/pottery.html.
Boxed lunches will be available for registered participants on Saturday for $5 each.
For visitors who will attend on Saturday only, registration is not required and admission
is $5 for adults; $3 for children and seniors; and free for children ages 5 and younger.
Spouse, student and group discounts may apply.
Located at 1 Mound State Parkway, 14 miles south of Interstate 20/59 at Tuscaloosa
just off U.S. state Highway 69, UA’s Moundville Archaeological Park is a National
Historic Landmark of 320 acres of more than 20 preserved prehistoric Indian mounds.
With campgrounds, picnic areas, a theater and lodge, the museum exhibits some of
the finest Mississippian-era artifacts ever found in North America. The park is open
daily, 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; the museum is open daily, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. A variety of programs
for children and adults are offered teaching Native American culture, arts and technologies.
|