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This new guide is the first to explore all facets of Native
American jewelry--its history, variety, and quality--in one
convenient resource. With coverage beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, this resource includes artists, techniques, materials,
motifs, and more. The encyclopedia opens with helpful introductory
essay to acquaint the reader with the subject. More than 350
entries and over 80 photos make this new encyclopedia and
exceptional value.
The bead played a vital role in Pueblo Indian jewelry design, and
its influence continues today in modernist American design. In
these pages, featuring more than 250 breathtaking photos, renowned
expert Baxter integrates her decades of research with updated
findings. Beads were made in the prehistoric American Southwest by
the ancestors of the Pueblo Indians, and survived into the historic
era. Bead jewelry creations in shell, stone, and silver are
important in the Native American jewelry marketplace. This book
revisits some leading misconceptions about Pueblo jewelry-making in
the existing literature. A survey of modern Pueblo jewelry
innovation confirms that its design is second to none, and
discusses how Pueblo design meshed with American mid-century
modernist expression. Today's Pueblo jewelers, also featured here,
continue to offer invention and originality.
With a fascinating variety of American Indian rings from the
southwestern United States shown in more than 350 color photos,
this book provides a design history of these rings, beginning with
pre-contact artifacts and continuing through to contemporary
artistic innovations. The text surveys key developments in Native
American ring design; materials and methods of construction;
definitions for historical and vintage rings; master innovators;
and the transition from craft to wearable art since 1980. Shortly
after the Civil War, Native American artisans began making silver
rings set with turquoise, coral, jet, mother-of-pearl, and colored
shell, adding lapis, malachite, onyx, and petrified wood over the
decades. More recently, artisans began utilizing gold and such
non-traditional settings as opals and diamonds, among others. Works
by Navajo (also known as Dine) and Pueblo artists are featured,
although Apache, Northern Cheyenne, and Sonoran Desert Native
jewelers are also included. A guide to valuation issues and
resources is offered for collectors.
This richly illustrated study of Southwestern Indian jewelry-design
history is a must-have for collectors, jewelry designers, and
students and scholars of Native American arts. Southwestern Indian
jewelry inspires admiration and creativity through its beauty,
mastery, and meaning. Delve into this fascinating and creative
world with renowned design historian Paula Baxter as she explores
the work of Navajo and Pueblo craftspeople in the years following
the American Civil War to the end of World War II. During this
productive 75-year period, Native American jewelry became
increasingly popular in the US and international marketplace.
Collected and celebrated as examples of true American artistry,
these works continue to be highly desirable and eminently wearable.
Through Baxters well-researched yet accessible text and more than
450 color images, readers will come to understand how Navajo and
Pueblo silversmiths and jewelry makers exercised shrewd judgment to
retain control over their inventive designs. Starting in the 1870s,
these artisans interwove tradition, new fabrication methods, and
personal vision to create works both for tribal adornment and
tourist commodity. From the turn of the century to the 1940s, these
designs evolved in harmony with the emerging modernist aesthetic.
Native jewelry was winning critical attention and praise, becoming
highly desirable products in the national and international
marketplace. Follow the development of Navajo and Pueblo jewelry
chronologically, from design origins to the pairing of silver and
stone to the modernist styles around midcentury. Included are
historical timelines, boxed supplemental information, a glossary of
key terms, and an extensive bibliography. Written by a recognized
authority and the author of such go-to references as Southwest
Silver Jewelry and The Encyclopedia of Native American Jewelry,
this book is destined to become a classic in the field.
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