Dominican University SOIS Omeka Site

Wall Painting

Dublin Core

Title

Wall Painting

Subject

Mesa Verde Artifact
Cliff Dwelling Painting
Pueblo Art

Description

Much like we paint and plaster our own houses today, Ancestral Pueblo people used layers of colorful plaster to decorate their walls. Designs were often painted with a fibrous yucca brush or with fingers using paint made from a combination of colored pigments from soil, minerals, or plants.

This wall mural (painting), found inside a room at Cliff Palace, includes white plaster covering each wall with a red plastered border below that is lined with red triangles. These and other geometrical designs were common in Ancestral Puebloan wall murals. The red lines and dots on the right wall are believed by some researches to be a type of calendar.

Here is a challenge – do some research and form your own theories about what these designs might have represented to the Ancestral Pueblo people. Although we may never know for sure, this is a good exercise to help us remember that these were real people with hopes, dreams, a love of art, ingenuity, and desire to communicate just like people today.

Creator

Mesa Verde National Park

Source

https://www.nps.gov/meve/learn/education/artifactgallery_wallpainting.htm

Publisher

National Park Service

Date

04/18/2020

Format

Still Images

Coverage

37.1669° N, 108.4732° W

Files

Citation

Mesa Verde National Park , “Wall Painting ,” Dominican University SOIS Omeka Site, accessed November 17, 2024, http://108.166.64.190/omeka222/items/show/2368.