She has been featured in numerous publications (including New Mexico Magazine, August 1994:36, and SWAIA Quarterly Fall 1982:10), galleries (Native American Collections in Denver, CO; Adobe Gallery and Agape Gallery in Albuquerque, NM), and museums (Wright Collection, Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; Spurlock Museum, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign).
[2] Her favorite designs include roadrunners, robins, berry bushes, flowers, rain clouds, rainbows, fineline hatching, and turtle effigy lids.
[1] Occasionally she produces plain pots for her husband Marcellus to paint with designs of Zia dancers.
One way to protect the pots from fire smudges is through the reuse of everyday objects such as old bedsprings and auto shock absorbers.
[clarification needed][3] Zia pots are unique in that they are tempered with basalt, a hard volcanic rock.