Jemez Pueblo
Maxine R. Toya “New Snow” is a full blooded Native American
Indian. She was born in 1948 into the Jemez Pueblo.
She is a member of the Corn Clan. Maxine began drawing and painting
at the age of 5. She began working with clay in 1971.
Her mother, Marie Romero, along with other family members, encouraged
and inspired her to learn the art of the long lived tradition of working
with clay, using ancient methods in the process. Maxine is also a school
teacher by profession. She enjoys teaching the traditions passed down
to her from her ancestors to the younger generations so that the legacy
of her people will be continued for centuries to come.
Maxine specializes in hand coiled clay sculptures of various contemporary
pueblo people images. She gathers her clay from within the hills of
the Jemez Pueblo. Then, she soaks the clay, sifts for impurities, hand
mixes, hand coils, hand shapes, sands the clay, hand paints using natural
pigments to make the colors, fires the sculptures outdoors, with cedar
chips, and stone polishes the final product.
Every piece of art she creates is symbolic and unique in her eyes. She
strives to achieve simplicity and elegance in her sculptures.
She signs her sculptures as: Maxine Toya, Jemez, followed by the corn
symbol to denote her Clan Origin.
She is related to: Damian Toya (son), Camilla Toya (daughter), Laura
Gachupin (sister), Gordon Foley (nephew), Bertha Gachupin (cousin),
Virginia Fragua (niece), Persingula Gachupin (grandmother), and Juan
B. Gachupin (great grandfather).
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Awards:
-1999 Santa Fe Indian Market (2) 1st Place
-1999 Santa Fe Indian Market (2) 3rd Place
-New Mexico State Fair various years consecutively since 1974 1st, 2nd,
& 3rd Place
-Eighth Northern Arts & Crafts Show various years consecutively
since 1974 1st, 2nd & 3rd Place
-Santa Fe Indian Market Best of Division in 1974
-Santa Fe Indian Market several years consecutively 1st, 2nd, &
3rd Place various years
-Many others too numerous to list
Publications:
-Southern Pueblo Pottery 2,000 Artist Biographies
-Talking with the Clay
-American Indian Pottery 2nd Edition
-The Pueblo Storyteller
-Storytellers & Other Figurative Pottery
-Southwestern Pottery Anasazi to Zuni
-Southwestern Indian Pottery 1999 Edition
Private Collections:
-Albuquerque International Airport
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