Volume 36 / Number 1

1994

Special Edition: Southwestern Native Fairs and Markets

On The Cover: Maria Martinez of San Ildefonso Pueblo demonstrating pottery making in 1912 in the Patio of the Palace of the Governors, Santa Fe. Courtesy of the Museum of New Mexico, neg. no. 61764. Photo by Jesse Nusbaum.

Vol. 36 / No. 1

By: Duffie Westheimer

The Annual MNA Indian Art Exhibitions

In 1984 I was sorting piles of Navajo rugs for the Museum of Northern Arizona’s Navajo Artists Exhibition. I think […]

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Vol. 36 / No. 1

By: Tessie Naranjo

Pottery Making in a Changing World: Santa Clara Pueblo

About 10 miles from my home in Santa Clara Pueblo, is Puce, the home of my ancestors. Puce sits on […]

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Vol. 36 / No. 1

Pueblo Pottery in the Collections of the University of Pennsylvania Museum

The University of Pennsylvania’s holdings include some 3500 pieces of Anasazi and Pueblo pottery, collected primarily in the 19th centaur. […]

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Vol. 36 / No. 1

By: Jeremy A. Sabloff

Musings and Visions from the Director’s Desk – Spring 1994

It is a great privilege and honor for me to be the eleventh Director and the second Charles K. Williams […]

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Vol. 36 / No. 1

By: Lee Horne

Introduction – Spring 1994

This special Expedition on Native Fairs and Markets of the Southwest takes issues of tradition and innovation, preservation and change, […]

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Vol. 36 / No. 1

By: Lea S. McChesney

Producing ‘Generations in Clay’: Kinship, Markets, and Hopi Pottery

In November 1992, “His” or Camille Nampeyo, a 28-year-old great-great-granddaughter of the famous potter Nampeyo, was profiled as one of […]

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Vol. 36 / No. 1

By: Bruce Bernstein

Pueblo Potters, Museum Curators, and Santa Fe’s Indian Market

In 1992 Lonnie Vigil, a potter from the Tewa pueblo of Nambe in New Mexico, almost won Best of Show […]

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Vol. 36 / No. 1

By: Linda B. Eaton

The Hopi Craftsman Exhibition: The Creation of Authenticity

The relationship of the public with American Indians has always been uneasy, and museums are often brokers in the complex […]

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