|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
With hundreds of vivid and detailed color photographs and an easy
narrative style enlivened by historical vignettes and images, the
authors bring overdue appreciation to a centuries-old Native
American basketmaking tradition in the Northeast. Explore the full
range of vintage Indian woodsplint and sweetgrass basketry in the
Northeastern U.S. and Canada, from practical "work" baskets made
for domestic use to whimsical "fancy" wares that appealed to
Victorian tourists. Basket collectors may compare four regional
styles: Southern New England and Long Island, Northern New England
and Canadian Maritimes, Upper New York State, and the Great Lakes.
Learn of the craft's key role in supporting many Eastern Algonquian
and Iroquoian peoples through generations of turmoil and change.
Discover how today's creative young artisans are building upon
their legacy. The book's "Resources" section guides readers to
relevant websites and publications as well as northeastern Indian
basketry collections in more than 30 public museums.
Over 750 color photographs illustrate this long-awaited guide for
collectors of vintage Native American basketry. Decades of basketry
research inform the text, guiding basket lovers to a better
understanding of these woven treasures. Clear images and concise
descriptions, presented in an extended gallery showcasing hundreds
of baskets, delineate specific tribal styles within Native North
America's nine basketry regions: Southwest, Great Basin,
California, Plateau, Northwest Coast, Arctic and Subarctic, Plains,
Southeast, and Northeast. Unique to this book is an in-depth
comparison of imported baskets being passed off as American Indian
work. The cultural and historical background as well as the
influence of the "Indian basket craze" are also examined. Valuable
guidance on buying, selling, and caring for baskets includes a
frank discussion of legal issues impacting basket collectors.
Rounding out this essential reference are comprehensive regional
bibliographies, Internet resource listings, and a directory of
American museums exhibiting Native American baskets.
More than 125 vivid color photographs display Indian-made wrought
silver, turquoise, shell and coral jewelry brought together from
the American Southwest's bright deserts, red canyon and timeless
pueblos. The authors explore the diversity of this hand-crafted
jewelry from historic collections as well as those available today
on reservations and in shops and galleries. They explain the
heritage conveyed by these distinctive products of Navajo, Zuni,
Hopi, and Rio Grande Pueblo artisans.
|
You may like...
Sleeper
Mike Nicol
Paperback
R300
R277
Discovery Miles 2 770
Outcast
Chris Ryan
Paperback
R445
R407
Discovery Miles 4 070
The Texas Murders
James Patterson, Andrew Bourelle
Paperback
R370
R289
Discovery Miles 2 890
|