In 
 
Order by: 
Available to: 
Price: 
 - 
This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated
$
9.99
Buy It Now
$4.87 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Northampton, United States
8.5”x11”, color illustrations. Minor soil, light wear.
$
9.99
Buy It Now
$4.87 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Northampton, United States
Heard Museum Issue.
$
9.99
Buy It Now
$4.87 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Northampton, United States
8.5”x11”, color illustrations. Minor soil, light wear.
$
9.99
Buy It Now
$4.87 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Northampton, United States
8.5”x11”, color illustrations. Minor soil, light wear.
$
9.99
Buy It Now
$4.87 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Northampton, United States
8.5”x11”, color illustrations. Minor soil, light wear, a little scuffing to the covers and a ding at the base of the spine.
$
15.75
Buy It Now
$5.96 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Los Angeles, United States
136 page magazine of the highest quality. Very good condition. SEE THE OTHER FINE TRIBAL ART BOOKS I HAVE LISTED.
$
13.95
Buy It Now
$6.61 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Los Angeles, United States
186 page magazine of the highest quality. SEE THE OTHER FINE TRIBAL ART BOOKS I HAVE LISTED.
1
 In 

Former Listings  
 
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Summer 2002 Volume 27 Number 3
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 27 | Number 3 | Summer 2002 17 GALLERIES 26 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 32 CALENDAR OF SUMMER EVENTS 38 ANCESTORS: THE DEANE-FREEMAN COLLECTIONS FROM THE BLOODS by Arni Brownstone An introduction to the Ancestors exhibition. Which is comprised of Blood materials from the collections made circa 1900 by Frederick Deane-Freeman. The issuer of rations on the Blood Reserve. And his wife Maude. 50 SACRED ILLUSIONS: A UNIQUE COLLECTION OF ZUNI POTS COMES TO LIGHT by Bruce Bernstein and Karen Lucic Discusses a collection of Zuni pots acquired during the 1920s and 1930s by what is now the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture/ Laboratory of Anthropology in Santa Fe. New Mexico. A recent examination by Zuni religious leaders has revealed that these pieces were intentionally manufactured to look like ancient ceremonial ... morevessels. 58 ART ON THE LAND: ROCK ART IN THE AMERICAN SOUTHWEST by J. J. Brody No one knows exactly how many rock art sites there are in the Southwest. But they number in the thousands, range in size from a single boulder to twenty or thirty miles of cliff wall and. Taken together. Contain hundreds of thousands of images. 62 BEARERS OF THE SACRED THUNDER BOW— PART 1 by Father Peter J. Powell Recounts the history of the Cheyenne warrior-priests called Contraries, whose principal weapon was the thunder bow. Or lightning lance. A weapon of awesome power.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Summer 2003 Volume 28 Number 3
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 28 | Number 3 | Summer 2003 17 GALLERIES 28 LEGAL BRIEFS by Ron McCoy 30 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 38 MUSEUMS 44 COMMERCIAL MATERIALS IN MODERN NAVAJO RUGS by Ann Lane Hedlund Addresses the fibers and yarns from nonnative sources that were used by Navajos predominately during the last quarter of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first. 56 FANCY COILED CAPS OF CENTRAL CALIFORNIA by Judith Finger Examines the coiled caps made by various tribes in central California. Describes their characteristics and places them within a cultural context. 64 HOPI DANCE WANDS. PART 2: IMAGERY by David S. Schramm Examines the range of images depicted on the dance wands used by Hopi women in performances of their Maraw society. As well as the evolution of these images over time. 70 A SHIELD TO HELP ... moreYOU THROUGH LIFE: KIOWA SHIELD DESINGS AND ORIGIN STORIES COLLECTED BY JAMES MOONEY. 1891-1906 by Ron McCoy Provides previously unpublished material. Compiled by anthropologist James Mooney, on the origin stories and motifs of a selection of Kiowa buffalo-hide shields. 84 CALENDAR OF SUMMER EVENTS 92 BOOK REVIEW NATIVE AMERICA COLLECTED. THE CULTURE OF AN ART WORLD by Margaret Dubin. Reviewed by W. Jackson Rushing III.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Summer 1978 Volume 3 Number 3 RARE
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE SUMMER 1978. VOLUME 3 NUMBER 3 Volume 3 | Number 3 | Summer 1978 4 GALLERIES 18 MUSEUMS 24 THE MILLICENT A. ROGERS MEMORIAL MUSEUM. TAOS, NEW MEXICO by Tally Richards 28 DAYBREAK STAR CENTER. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON by Guy and Doris Monthan 36 THE SQUASH BLOSSOM by Clara Lee Tanner 44 MULTIPLE PATTERN GERMANTOWN RUGS By Guy and Doris Monthan 50 THE UNPREDITABLE R. C. GORMAN by Guy and Doris Monthan 58 CONTEMPORARY ALGONKIAN LEGEND PAINTING by John Anson Warner 70 CONSERVING SOUTHWESTERN POTTERY by Jane Norman 74 THE DENVER MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY: CRANE HALL by Joyce Herold 84 SUMMER SHOWS Please take a look at my other Rare& Out Of Print Books!
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Summer 2005 Volume 30 Number 3
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 30 | Number 3 | Summer 2005 HEARD MUSEUM 75TH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE 17 GALLERIES 26 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 32 MUSEUMS 44 BOOK REVIEW BLANKET WEAVING OF THE SOUTHWEST by Joe Ben Wheat, edited by Ann Lane Hedlund. Reviewed by Cheri Falkenstien-Doyle. 48 INTRODUCTION by Frank Goodyear 50 A SMALL BUILDING TO PUT THINGS IN by Ann Marshall In its seventy-fifth anniversary year. That“small building” the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Arizona— has grown to 125,000 square feet, presenting in its exhibit galleries one of the finest regional collections of native art, numbering more than thirty-two thousand pieces. This article describes the museum’s founding and the collectors and supporters who have built the museum’s collections. 62 NATIVE AMERICAN SILVERSMITHS IN THE SOUTHWEST by Diana Pardue Since the late 1800s. ... moreStore owners in the Southwest have employed Native American silversmiths to demonstrate their work and create jewelry for sale. This article recounts the history of this practice, profiles some better-known silversmiths and presents jewelry, now in the Heard Museum’s collection, by these artists. 70 A BEAUTIFUL RESISTANCE: AMERICAN INDIAN PAINTINGS AT THE HEARD MUSEUM by Joe Baker Presents an overview of the Heard Museum’s collection of Native American paintings. Which now number around three thousand, and highlights some selected pieces from the collection. 78 THE VOLZ COLLECTION OF HOPI KATSINA DOLLS AT THE HEARD MUSEUM by Tricia Loscher Examines the collection of Hopi katsina dolls donated to the Heard Museum by the Fred Harvey Company. Which purchased them from Indian trader Frederick William Volz in 1901, and discusses the way in which Volz influenced the making of katsina dolls for the tourist trade.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Summer 2004 Volume 29 Number 3
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 29 | Number 3 | Summer 2004 17 GALLERIES 30 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 38 CALENDAR OF SUMMER EVENTS 46 THE JUMP DANCE BASKET OF NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA by Tim Ames Reviews the history and development of Jump Dance baskets. Produced principally by the Hupa, Yurok and Karuk tribes of northwestern California. 54“THE INDIANS ALSO HAVE A GAME SOMEWHAT SIMILAR TO CARDS” NATIVE AMERICAN CARDS OF FRENCH AND ENGLISH DERIVATION by Virginia Wayland. Harold Wayland and Alan Ferg Discusses six packs of playing cards—made by the Ojibwa. Yup’ik, Blackfoot, Thompson(Nlaka’pamux) and two unknown tribes—that were modeled on printed paper cards of French and English origin. 64 THE FRANK T. SIEBERT COLLECTION OF NATIVE AMERICAN ART by Rebecca Cole-Will The Frank T. Siebert Collection of Native American Art. On display ... moreat the Abbe Museum, Bar Harbor, Maine, showcases objects collected by Siebert, a medical doctor who worked over a sixty-year period documenting Algonquian languages. 72 KEMO SABE: THE TONTO PAINTINGS OF JAUNE QUICK-TO-SEE SMITH by Zena Pearlstone Offers a detailed analysis of a series of twelve paintings created by Jaune Quick-to-See Smith in 2002. Helping the viewer to decipher the paintings’ juxtapositions of image and text, and showing how the complexities of the artist’s thought processes are embodied by and mirrored in her painting techniques. 80 MUSEUMS 90 BOOK REVIEW PAINTERS. PATRONS, AND IDENTITY: ESSAYS IN NATIVE AMERICAN ART TO HONOR J. J. BRODY edited by Joyce M. Szabo. Reviewed by Rebecca J. Dobkins.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Summer 1998 Volume 23 Number 3
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Summer 1998 Volume 23 Number 3 Volume 23 | Number 1 | Winter 1997 18 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 26 MUSEUMS 30 GALLERIES 36 OSCAR HOWE AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF NATIVE AMERICAN ART by Mark Andrew White Explains how Howe’s artistic style— often thought to have been influenced by European cubist artists— was actually derived from owa and tahokmu. Dakota technical and design traditions. 44 INDIAN CHIC: THE DENVER ART MUSEUM’S INDIAN STYLE SHOW by Nancy J. Parezo with Nancy J. Blomberg Written in conjunction with an exhibition which will open at the Denver Art Museum in January. This article introduces the Indian Style Show. One of the most successful anthropological outreach programs of the 1940s and 1950s in which some fifty-three ensembles. Circa 1830 to 1953, were shown in various venues throughout the country. ... more56 IN SEARCH OF YAH-NAH-PAH: THE EARLY GALLEGOS“YEI” BLANKETS AND THEIR WEAVERS by Jean-Paul and Rebecca M. Valette Analyzes some inconsistencies in the way the few extant single-figure“yei” weavings have been attributed in the scholarly literature and presents new research on the subject. Which suggests the existence of a second, previously unrecognized weaver. 70 LAME BULL: THE CHEYENNE MEDICINE MAN by Imre Nagy Focuses on the Cheyenne artist Lame Bull. Making an attempt to reconstruct what the author calls his“spiritual oeuvre” that is. Painted shields, tipis, even a rawhide container— the designs of which he owned and which were made under his guidance. Please take a look at my other Rare& Out Of Print Books!
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Summer 1993 Volume 18 Number 3
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Summer 1993 Volume 18 Number 3 Volume 18 | Number 3 | Summer 1993 24 MUSEUMS 26 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 28 GALLERIES 30 LEGAL BRIEFS by Ron McCoy 36 JOSEPH NO TWO HORNS. HE NUPA WANICA by David L. Wooley and Joseph D. Horse Capture Details the carved horse memorials. Sketchbook pictographs, shields, and muslin and tipi drawings created by Hunkpapa Lakota artist No Two Horns(1852–1942) one of the most prolific of the known Plains artists. 44 CHUKCHANSI YOKUTS AND SOUTHERN MIWOK WEAVERS OF YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK by Craig D. Bates and Martha J. Lee Describes the diagnostic characteristics of the baskets woven by the Chukchansi Yokuts and Southern Miwok weavers of the Yosemite National Park region. Which blend the basketry traditions of the two groups. 52 IMAGES AND OBJECTS FROM FATHER DESMET AND THE INDIANS ... moreOF THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN WEST by Kate C. Duncan Written in conjunction with the exhibition Sacred Encounters: Father DeSmet and the Indians of the Rocky Mountain West. This article provides an overview of some of the items collected by Jesuit missionary Father Pierre DeSmet in the mid-1800s. 64 RECOGNIZING ETHNOGRAPHIC WEAR PATTERNS ON SOUTHWESTERN TEXTILES by Jeanne Brako Examines the wear patterns and other damage on Southwestern textiles that result. Not from past misuse or storage, but rather from how the textiles were originally used. 81 CALENDAR OF SUMMER EVENTS 86 BOOK REVIEW CHIEFLY FEASTS: THE ENDURING KWAKIUTL POTLATCH. Reviewed by Alan L. Hoover. 110 ADVERTISER INDEX Please take a look at my other Rare& Out Of Print Books!
ANTIQUE NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE - SUMMER 1976 ISSUE
American Indian Art Magazine. Summer. 1976” description continues below the picture- DISCUSSION: An early issue of the premier magazine on the arts of native Americans. DESCRIPTION: Softcover. 8.5"x11" 85 pages, color and black& white illustrations. CONDITION NOTES: The covers have some light wear and rubbing. The interior has some minor soil. But otherwise is clean and nice, with a tight binding. OVERSEAS BUYERS PLEASE NOTE: Our International shipping charges are based on the weight. When boxed for shipping, of each book-please check the postage chart for the cost of shipping to your country. We offer“combined shipping charges” for orders for more than one book–this often means the shipping cost for the books is less than it would have been if they had been purchased and shipped one at a time, so please ask us for a shipping ... morequote if you are thinking about buying more than one book. Thanks! QUESTIONS about this item? If you have any questions regarding this item. Please let us know and we will respond promptly. We have more books like this listed in our Ebay store! Joslin Hall Books Selling books since 1983 INSURANCE? As a seller we take responsibility for properly packing and delivering your purchase safely to you. You do not have to spend extra for insurance to guarantee that. RETURNS: We want you to be completely satisfied- anything is returnable for any reason at all within 14 days of receipt; we do ask that you notify us that you are returning it. OVERSEAS CUSTOMERS PLEASE NOTE: We always welcome orders from customers outside the United States. The“Free Shipping” marker found on many of our books only applies to shipping within the United States–we wish we could afford to offer free overseas shipping. But we cannot. Please use the“Shipping& Payments” tab(above) to check the cost of shipping. We charge actual shipping based on weight, so sometimes large, heavy, inexpensive books can actually cost more to ship than the book itself costs–I know that seems odd, but the shipp
ANTIQUE AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE - SUMMER 1980 VOL. 5 NO. 3
OFFERED FOR AUCTION TYPE SALE IS THIS SPECIAL PLAINS ISSUE OF AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE. SUMMER 1980. 88 PAGES, LOTS OF INTERESTING ADVERTISEMENTS, AND GREAT HISTORICAL ARTICLES. I HAVE ADDED A SCAN OF THE CONTENTS PAGE FOR YOU TO VIEW THE SUBJECTS IN THIS ISSUE. PLEASE CHECK OUT MY OTHER NATIVE AMERICAN LISTINGS FOR SALE IN MY STORE.
ANTIQUE NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE - SUMMER 1977
American Indian Art magazine. Summer of 1977. Very little cover wear. Inside is very good. Only ship to lower 48 states.