Skip to Content

Eunice Prieto

Showing 12 of 15


Print this page


Eunice Prieto

American, (1924–2015)


Eunice Adams Prieto was the youngest of two sisters who grew up on a farm outside of Spencerport, New York, on the Erie Canal. Though small in stature, her nickname was “Amazon Adams,” as her capacity for hard work of all kinds carried her through life’s challenges. On the farm as a young girl she drove tractors and combines. Eunice attended Alfred University in New York, where she met her future Spanish-born husband, Antonio Prieto. They settled in the Bay Area where she taught ceramics at a number of community sites and college programs, while raising four sons and exhibiting her ceramics frequently. After having her sons, in 1968, she earned her M.F.A. at California College of the Arts and Crafts (CCAC).

The Prieto’s lived on the Mills College, Oakland, California campus where their home was a center for a community of artists, as her husband was head of the ceramics program. Though ceramics was her life-long primary art form, Eunice also enameled and painted. Eunice was a respected potter and she took over her husband’s classes at Mills for a while after he died in 1967. In the 1970s, Eunice and her sons relocated to West Oakland where they established Prieto Studios, which still exists today. Eunice later remarried and lived in the high basin range of western Nevada and continued with ceramics and watercolor.

She and Anthony had four sons; the youngest is Mark and is currently a well-known potter. Another of their sons, Esteban, is a glass artist.

Eunice made ceramics and threw until she was 91 years old. She grew up on a farm and "had amazing capacity of energy", Mark Prieto said.



Artist Objects

Bowl 1984.815

Bowl 1984.816

Bowl 1984.817

Bowl 1984.939

Bowl 1984.1031

Compote 1984.779

Cup 1984.87

Cup 1984.88

Cup 1984.89

Cup 1984.90

Cup 1984.91

Cup 1984.92

Jar 1984.998

Ladle 1984.22

Plate 1984.1015

Plate 1984.1276

Tureen 1984.21


Your current search criteria is: Exhibitions is "Ceramic Niches - The Ceramic Power House: USU Faculty and Alums From the Collection".