MOTA DEL CUERVO

The Female Lineage of Clay in Mota del Cuervo

In Mota del Cuervo, ceramics carry a distinctly feminine voice. For centuries, the Barrio de las Cantarerías was a small productive universe where home and workshop merged, and where women shaped the clay by hand while men extracted the earth or fired the kilns. Eighteenth-century census records speak of dozens of potter families concentrated in this neighborhood; their memory lives on today in the Pottery Museum, opened in 2009 in the very heart of the Cantarerías district.

The museum and its surroundings recount a unique technical lineage: coil building (construction with rolls) and a primitive “Celtic wheel.” Local research links this tradition to an Arab heritage in firing techniques and a Celtic influence in the use of the roller.

The Ceramic Soul of Mota del Cuervo

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El Cántaro Traditional Pottery

A benchmark workshop in the municipality.…
Municipal Arab Kiln

It has two chambers: an underground one used for combustion with a single access point, and an upper chamber where the pieces are placed.…
Pottery Museum

The pieces are made exclusively by women from the village, one of the few centers of female ceramics on the Iberian Peninsula, using the coil-building technique.…

The material of Mota is a reddish clay made for water: “clay good for water,” as the cantareras used to say—ill-suited to direct fire and glazing, which explains the strength of its repertoire of cántaros, cantarillas, búcaros, and horcillas. The coil-building technique raises the body with rolls (casco), and after widening and smoothing it with wooden paddles, the neck and handle are finished; a patient process that continues to be explained in the museum.

This way of making—manual, rhythmic, and feminine—is an essential part of Mota’s identity. The image of the cántaro hanging in the shade or resting on the well’s curb encapsulates a culture of water that the municipality now reclaims through new galleries and interpretive narratives dedicated to the women cantareras.

This way of making—entirely manual—served thirst and home life here: cántaros for carrying and cooling water, búcaros that scented it, and horcillas to keep it “at hand” in the kitchen. This culture of water shaped the neighborhood—its streets, courtyards, and hanging structures—and it still pulses every 28 August during the Fiestas of the Barrio de las Cantarerías, when residents decorate the streets and the procession crosses the former pottery district.

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