Career
Bernabe Campechano has worked for over forty years in the ceramics town of Tonalá, Jalisco. He has created a number of traditional Jalisco ceramics, but is best known for his petatillo pieces. Petatillo ceramics are noted for their intricate designs, which place tiny crosshatches in the empty spaces among the larger design elements.
This work is intricate and time-consuming, which has made it expensive and hard to find.
Their work is a combination of tradition and innovation. He uses white, black, beige and red clays as well as enamel paints for ceramics, some of which he prepares himself.
Traditional colors include black, red and white, but the workshop has also experimented with other colors such as green and blue with success. His pieces are shaped both with molds and turntables.
Slips and paints are made from mineral pigments and are applied using animal hair brushes, made at the workshop.
Petatillo pieces are first colored red inside and out after drying. The major decorative images are first traced on the piece then filled in. The empty spaces that are left are filled in with tiny crosshatched lines, which gives the ceramic its name.
The piece is fired for the first time, then glazed and fired again.
Today the traditional glazes have been replaced with lead-free versions. Most of the petatillo pieces are bowls, vases, platters, soup tureens and water glasses.