In 
 
Order by: 
Available to: 
Price: 
 - 
This site contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated
$
10.00
Buy It Now
$5.50 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Dallas, United States
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 30 | Number 1 | Winter 2004 17 MUSEUMS 28 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 34 BOOKS 46 LEGAL BRIEFS by Ron McCoy 52 ... moreEARLY NATIVE AMERICAN COLLECTIONS IN DEERFIELD by Suzanne Flynt Presents an overview of the history of the Memorial Hall Museum. Deerfield, Massachusetts and discusses Remembering 1704: Commemoration and Context of the Deerfield Raid, an exhibit incorporating perspectives of the participating Kanien’kehaka, Abenaki and Wendat-Huron communities as well as the English and French. 60 ARIZONA STATE MUSEUM’S TEXTILES AND THE“SOUTHWEST–NORTHWEST” CONTINUUM by Ann Lane Hedlund and Diane Dittemore Provides an overview of the Arizona State Museum’s textile collections from the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico and highlights particular collection histories that illustrate potential for further investigation. 68 EXHIBITION REVIEW OF CONTINUUM: 12 ARTISTS AT THE GEORGE GUSTAV HEYE CENTER. PART 1 by Jo Ortel Review of a series of exhibits on display at the George Gustav Heye Center in New York. These exhibits feature works by Kay WalkingStick. Rick Bartow, Joe Feddersen, Harry Fonseca, Richard Ray Whitman, Edgar Heap of Birds(Hock E Aye Vi) 78 THE ART OF HISTORY: LAKOTA WINTER COUNTS by Ron McCoy Details the history of and literature about Lakota winter counts. These chronicles served not only as calendars but also as teaching tools.
$
14.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
7.07
Buy It Now
$9.85 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Coraopolis, United States
American Indian Art magazine 2007 Editions. You pick which ones you want. The price is price per book. Buy as any as the quantity will allow. I will combine ... moreshipping into one for savings. All four are 2007 books. I can send you more pictures if needed. Minor edge wear as shown insides are clean. I’ve got other vintage Native American books on eBay. Combine lots and save on shipping I can get 4 books in one usps flat rate envelope. Buy multiple magazines and save on shipping
$
7.50
Buy It Now
$6.95 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: North Adams, United States
Lot of 3 American Indian Art Magazine Autumn 1990. Autumn 1996, Spring 1990 From a smoke free home! Check out my other items!
$
12.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Like New
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
14.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Brand New
Location: Baton Rouge, United States
Brand new, ships out fast, very well-protected.
$
13.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
7.00
Buy It Now
$3.00 Shipping
Condition: Like New
Location: Scottsdale, United States
The great Crow shield on the cover is from the Whitecloud Collection in an article about the collection's show at the New Orleans Museum of Art. Other ... morefeatures: Zuni Pueblo Pottery: An Overview, Prehistoric Antecedents of the Plains Bow-Spear and Carl Beam: The Art of Peaceful Protest (he's am Ojibwa multi-media artist). Condition is like it was purchased yesterday.
$
5.00
Buy It Now
$4.00 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Webster, United States
$
5.00
Buy It Now
$4.00 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Webster, United States
"The Devil Fish" - In Tlingit Sacred Art by Aldona Jonaitis.
$
12.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
9.99
Buy It Now
$5.25 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Dayton, United States
Issue is in Very Good Condition! Great Magazine!
$
9.99
4d 12h 10m 12s
0 bids
$6.37 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Emmaus, United States
Good condition. "Indian" written in pencil on cover. All pages intact.
$
15.99
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Portsmouth, United States
This issue of AMERICAN INDIAN ART Magazine from the summer of 1994 features articles and photographs highlighting the beauty and significance of Cheyenne ... moreShields and Moses Old Bull's work in the world of art. The articles explore their unique styles and techniques, as well as the cultural and historical context of their pieces. The magazine is in English and is perfect for those interested in art and photography, particularly in the realm of Native American art.What you see is what you get! Look over the photos carefully, as they are of the actual item(s) you’re buying. Any questions, just ask! Thanks for looking and be sure to check out my other auctions. 🙏🏻
$
7.64
Buy It Now
$5.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Appleton, United States
I'm a magazine addict. Nothing makes me happier than getting a bunch of new magazines. Except maybe a bunch of new magazines and a cupcake. The thing ... moreis I look at them for 15 minutes and then put them away. So now I have all these great magazines that someone else could surely enjoy. So this is your chance to get some nice magazines at a great price. American Indian Art magazine. Summer 1983. 88 pages. Has articles on The California Collection of I. G. Voznesenski, The Revolt of Trader Boy: Oscar Howe and Indian Art and a Century and a Half of Blackfeet Picture Writing and much more. I love this magazine almost more for all the ads of things for sale rather than the articles! This is a very glossy magazine that doesn't seem to photograph well. Original price was $4.50 but this magazine is now out of print and hard to find.
$
17.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
24.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
8.50
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Acceptable
Location: United States
106 pages. Scans may not pick up all flaws. (Shelf 14.1).
$
39.99
Buy It Now
$13.00 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Mendon, United States
Light cover wear. See photos.
$
12.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
13.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
16.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Like New
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
4.99
Buy It Now
$6.75 Shipping
Condition: Acceptable
Location: Chesterton, United States
February/March 2022. Official 2022. Pre-owned in good condition. Has edge wear over spine. Light edge wear front and back covers with a crease left lower ... moreback cover. Right lower corner of pages creased.
$
16.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
14.99
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Lexington, United States
Spring 2015.
$
17.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
17.99
Buy It Now
$4.65 Shipping
Condition: Used
Location: Fullerton, United States
A VERY COLLECTIBLE EDITION of this outstanding magazine devoted to antique and contemporary Indian art with all the classic photos, informative text, ... moreand those wonderful ads of all the old galleries. THIS WONDERFUL MAGAZINE WENT OUT OF PRINT WHICH REMAINS A LOSS TO OUR COLLECTING COMMUNITY FOR SURE...LOW NO RESERVE PRICE !.
$
7.50
Buy It Now
$6.95 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: North Adams, United States
$
9.95
Buy It Now
$12.45 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Gettysburg, United States
American Indian Art Magazine Autumn 1993: The Jewelry Issue. Vol 18 No 4. Wraps. 116 pages. Illustrated. 
$
200.00
Buy It Now
$4.13 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Livermore, United States
A collection of 10 American Indian Art Magazines from Marvel, featuring issues from 1999, 2004, 2009, and 2010. Each issue covers different seasons - ... morespring, summer, autumn, and winter. The vintage collection is perfect for art enthusiasts.• Features 10 unique issues• Covers years from 1999 to 2010• Includes spring, summer, autumn, and winter editions• From the renowned brand American Indian Art Magazine• Perfect for vintage art enthusiastsCondition: Pre-Owned Like NewSee pictures. Water damage to a couple of issues. Sign up for our weekly newsletter at https://www.ebay.com/str/kandlresale to receive the weekly newsletter highlighting newly posted items from that week! Click on the heart next to our store name at the top of the page.
$
59.88
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Acceptable
Location: Topeka, United States
(1) Autumn 75.
$
14.77
Buy It Now
$8.30 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Joshua, United States
We ship the same business day in most cases.
$
7.50
Buy It Now
$6.95 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: North Adams, United States
$
7.64
Buy It Now
$5.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Appleton, United States
I'm a magazine addict. Nothing makes me happier than getting a bunch of new magazines. Except maybe a bunch of new magazines and a cupcake. The thing ... moreis I look at them for 15 minutes and then put them away. So now I have all these great magazines that someone else could surely enjoy. So this is your chance to get some nice magazines at a great price. American Indian Art magazine. Summer 1993. 112 pages. Has articles on Joseph No Two Horns, weavers of Yosemite, ethnographic wear patterns on southwestern textiles, and much more. I love this magazine almost more for all the ads of things for sale rather than the articles! This is a very glossy magazine that doesn't seem to photograph well. Original price was $5 but this magazine is now out of print and hard to find. First magazine ships for $5.40.
$
12.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
7.64
Buy It Now
$5.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Appleton, United States
I'm a magazine addict. Nothing makes me happier than getting a bunch of new magazines. Except maybe a bunch of new magazines and a cupcake. The thing ... moreis I look at them for 15 minutes and then put them away. So now I have all these great magazines that someone else could surely enjoy. So this is your chance to get some nice magazines at a great price. American Indian Art magazine. Winter 1984. 80 pages. Anniversary issue. Has articles on Happy Jack the king of the Eskimo ivory carvers, a rare type of Plains Indian women's side fold dress, backrest banners among the Ojibwa and Cree, and much more. I love this magazine almost more for all the ads of things for sale rather than the articles! This is a very glossy magazine that doesn't seem to photograph well. The cover is actually tan and not off white. Original price was $4.
$
16.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Like New
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
16.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
18.99
Buy It Now
$16.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Nazareth, United States
American Indian Art Magazine - Spring, Summer, Autumn & Winter 1998 Issues.
$
12.99
Buy It Now
$16.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Nazareth, United States
American Indian Art Magazine - Spring, Summer, Autumn & Winter 2012 Issues.
$
7.64
Buy It Now
$5.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Appleton, United States
I'm a magazine addict. Nothing makes me happier than getting a bunch of new magazines. Except maybe a bunch of new magazines and a cupcake. The thing ... moreis I look at them for 15 minutes and then put them away. So now I have all these great magazines that someone else could surely enjoy. So this is your chance to get some nice magazines at a great price. American Indian Art magazine. Spring 1990. 102 pages. Has articles on Seminole folk art, Iroquois sculpture, Manitoba painting, and much more. I love this magazine almost more for all the ads of things for sale rather than the articles! This is a very glossy magazine that doesn't seem to photograph well. Original price was $5 but this magazine is now out of print and hard to find. First magazine ships for $5.40. Additional magazines ship for just 50 cents each.
$
16.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Like New
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
12.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
7.64
Buy It Now
$5.40 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Appleton, United States
I'm a magazine addict. Nothing makes me happier than getting a bunch of new magazines. Except maybe a bunch of new magazines and a cupcake. The thing ... moreis I look at them for 15 minutes and then put them away. So now I have all these great magazines that someone else could surely enjoy. So this is your chance to get some nice magazines at a great price. American Indian Art magazine. Summer 1991. 112 pages. Has articles on wedge weave textiles of the Navajo, Alaskan garments and Wasco woven beadwork and much more. I love this magazine almost more for all the ads of things for sale rather than the articles! This is a very glossy magazine that doesn't seem to photograph well. Original price was $5 but this magazine is now out of print and hard to find. First magazine ships for $5.40. Additional magazines ship for just 50 cents each.
$
24.99
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Acceptable
Location: Mesa, United States
$
99.99
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Mesa, United States
One issue is ripping apart at the top and bottom. The lot weighs 22 lbs.
$
7.50
Buy It Now
$6.95 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: North Adams, United States
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 ... more36 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. 56 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!
$
7.64
Buy It Now
$5.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Jefferson City, United States
I'm a magazine addict. Except maybe a bunch of new magazines and a cupcake. The thing is I look at them for 15 minutes and then put them away.
$
16.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Like New
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
9.45
Buy It Now
$4.00 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Gorham, United States
Good condition
$
14.00
Buy It Now
$9.97 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Dallas, United States
Included are : IAIA Rocks the 60's, George Morrison and much more. Well illustrated.
$
7.64
Buy It Now
$5.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Appleton, United States
I'm a magazine addict. Nothing makes me happier than getting a bunch of new magazines. Except maybe a bunch of new magazines and a cupcake. The thing ... moreis I look at them for 15 minutes and then put them away. So now I have all these great magazines that someone else could surely enjoy. So this is your chance to get some nice magazines at a great price. American Indian Art magazine. Winter 1994. 112 pages. Has articles on a case study in contemporary Kwakwaka'wakw performance art, the paintings of Albert Looking Elk, the creation of Pueblo Art Pottery, and much more. I love this magazine almost more for all the ads of things for sale rather than the articles! This is a very glossy magazine that doesn't seem to photograph well. Original price was $5.00 but this magazine is now out of print and hard to find. First magazine ships for $5.40.
$
14.99
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Lexington, United States
Autumn 2011.
$
1.99
Buy It Now
$9.70 Shipping
Condition: Good
Location: Benton Harbor, United States
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 30 | Number 4 | Autumn 2005 18 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 33 CALENDAR OF AUTUMN EVENTS 44 LEGAL BRIEFS by Ron ... moreMcCoy 48 A TALE OF TWO CARVERS: THE RAIN WALL SCREEN OF THE WHALE HOUSE. KLUKWAN, ALASKA by Steven C. Brown A detailed study of the interior house screen of the Gaanaxteidí Whale House in the Chilkat Tlingit village of Klukwan. Alaska, which has been attributed to both Tlingit and Tsimshian artists ever since it was first written about in detail by ethnographer George Thornton Emmons in 1916. 60 NATIVE VIEWS: INFLUENCES OF MODERN CULTURE ABOARD ARTRAIN USA by Gael Hancock Reviews exhibit Native Views: Influences of Modern Culture. Which includes seventy-one pieces of contemporary art by fifty-four Native American artists. The exhibit is currently touring the United States via the country’s rails aboard Artrain USA, a five-car rolling museum. 68“THE GREATEST INDIVIDUAL HUNTER OF MATERIAL IN THE NORTH” COLLECTING IN ALASKA. CANADA AND CHUKOTKA WITH CAPTAIN JOSEPH-FIDÈLE BERNARD by Judy Hall Recounts the life of Joseph-Fidèle Bernard. Who had a thirty-year career as a trader, collector, trapper, miner and explorer in Alaska, the western Canadian Arctic and the Russian Far East. Bernard’s comprehensive anthropological collections rival those of other explorers and scientists in the Arctic at the turn of the century. 78 TRICKSTER IN CONTEMPORARY NATIVE AMERICAN ART AND THOUGHT: THE INDIGENOUS CULTURAL LANGUAGE OF BOB HAOZOUS by Traci L. Morris-Carlsten Discusses the life and career of the Apache artist Bob Haozous. And suggests that in his work Haozous employs humorous and ironic images in order to draw attention to the boundaries that his art transgresses and to stimulate discussion via symbolic language.
$
14.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
12.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Like New
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
16.95
Buy It Now
Free Shipping
Condition: Like New
Location: Fuquay Varina, United States
$
5.00
2d 14h 52m 28s
0 bids
$8.70 Shipping
Condition: Like New
Location: Charlotte, United States
Lot of 3 American Indian Art Magazine Autumn 1990. Autumn 1996, Spring 1990 From a smoke free home! Check out my other items!
$
15.99
Buy It Now
$16.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Nazareth, United States
American Indian Art Magazine - Spring, Summer, Autumn & Winter 2006 Issues.
$
12.99
Buy It Now
$16.40 Shipping
Condition: Very Good
Location: Nazareth, United States
American Indian Art Magazine - Spring, Summer, Autumn & Winter 2012 Issues.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
 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 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 Winter 2006 Volume 32 Number 1
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 32 | Number 1 | Winter 2006 17 GALLERIES 24 CALENDAR OF WINTER EVENTS 30 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 38 TEXTILE AS CULTURAL TEXT: CONTEMPORARY NAVAJO WEAVING by Jennifer McLerran Through interviews with Navajo weavers. This article suggests that the practice of weaving continues to demonstrate personal and social values and to play a vital role in shaping self and group identity. 50 OUR PEOPLE. OUR LAND, OUR IMAGES: INTERNATIONAL INDIGENOUS PHOTOGRAPHY by Veronica Passalacqua The exhibit Our People. Our Land, Our Images, organized by the C. N. Gorman Museum, University of California, Davis, features works by indigenous photographers from North and South America, the Middle East and New Zealand. 58 TSAKURSHOVI: THE LITTLE SHOP THAT DID by Zena Pearlstone Presents the story of Tsakurshovi. A shop on the ... moreHopi Reservation that is perhaps best known for its famous“Don’t Worry Be Hopi” T-shirts but that has an important effect on the evolution of and market for Hopi arts, particularly neotraditional tithu. 66 OF THIS CONTINENT by W. Jackson Rushing III A detailed review of Changing Hands: Art Without Reservation 2. The second of three traveling shows of contemporary Native art organized by the Museum of Arts& Design, New York, which features the work of 184 artists from the regions east of the Mississippi, including the southeastern United States and northeastern Canada.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Spring 1999 Volume 24 Number 2
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Spring 1999 Volume 24 Number 2 Volume 24 | Number 2 | Spring 1999 $6.00 Volume 24 | Number 2 | Spring 1999 17 MUSEUMS 20 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 28 GALLERIES 30 ART IN 2 WORLDS: THE NATIVE AMERICAN FINE ART INVITATIONAL 1983–1997 by Margaret Archuleta Presents an overview of the Native American fine art invitational shows that have been held at the Heard Museum. Phoenix, Arizona, over the last 15 years, suggesting that these shows have been important not only to the artists involved but in defining Native art to the wider public. 36 PEYOTE ARTS IN THE COLLECTION OF THE GILCREASE MUSEUM by Daniel C. Swan Written in conjunction with an exhibition that opened in January at the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa. Oklahoma, this article summarizes the material culture associated with the Native American Church. 46 NOTES ... moreON A RECENTLY DISCOVERED INDIAN SHIRT FROM NEW FRANCE by Ted J. Brasser Details a small group of historic skin artifacts with abstract paintings that presumably originate from the Great Lakes or Eastern Prairie and— in light of these— tries to uncover the provenance of a shirt painted in this style that was acquired from a French antiques dealer in the 1980s. 56 PRIDE ON PARADE: 150 YEARS OF PLATEAU HORSEGEAR by Mariana Mace Summarizes the development of Plateau horsegear on the Plateau over the last 150 years. Referring to early and reservation features of the gear as well as some of the past and present occasions for its display. Please take a look at my other Rare& Out Of Print Books!
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Spring 2006 Volume 31 Number 2
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 31 | Number 2 | Spring 2006 17 GALLERIES 28 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 36 MUSEUMS 44 DAVID AND DENNIS CUSICK. EARLY IROQUOIS REALIST ARTISTS by William C. Sturtevant Details the known works by Tuscarora brothers David and Dennis Cusick. Founders of the Early Iroquois Realistic style of painting and drawing, a style much admired by their Iroquois contemporaries but based on Euro-American techniques. 56 THE STORYTELLING JEWELRY OF DENISE AND SAMUELWALLACE by Lois Sherr Dubin Discusses the jewelry of Denise and Samuel Wallace. Who create wearable art— notably, their storytelling belts— with complex designs drawn primarily from Denise’s Chugach Aleut heritage. A traveling retrospective exhibition, Arctic Transformations: The Jewelry of Denise and Samuel Wallace, features nearly two hundred of their pieces ... morecreated over the past quarter century. 66 CHEMEHUEVI COILED BASKETS: ORIGINS AND STYLISTIC TRENDS by John J. Kania Through the examination of Chemehuevi coiled baskets in various museum collections. This article recounts the history and characteristics of Chemehuevi basketry from the late nineteenth century to the present and provides criteria to differentiate their baskets from those made by the Western Apache, Yavapai and Havasupai. 74 ARIKARA DRAWINGS: NEW SOURCES OF VISUAL HISTORY by Candace S. Greene A recent study of two books of Arikara drawings from the mid-1870s in the National Anthropological Archives. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. makes it clear that the Arikara had an active pictorial art tradition. As well as documenting the artistic achievements of the Arikara, these drawings serve as a rich source of information on their culture and history. 88 CALENDAR OF SPRING EVENTS 94 LEGAL BRIEFS by Ron McCoy 102 BOOK REVIEW HERO. HAWK, AND OPEN HAND: AMERICAN INDIAN ART OF THE ANCIENT MIDWEST AND SOUTH edited by Robert V. Sharp, Richard F. Townsend, general editor. Reviewed by Ron McCoy.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Spring 2009 Volume 34 Number 2
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 34 | Number 2 | Spring 2009 17 GALLERIES 22 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 28 MUSEUMS 36 THE SZWEDZICKI PORTFOLIOS OF AMERICAN INDIAN ART. 1929–1952: KIOWA INDIAN ART. PUEBLO INDIAN PAINTING& PUEBLO INDIAN POTTERY by Janet Catherine Berlo Considers Kiowa Indian Art. Pueblo Indian Painting and Pueblo Indian Pottery. The first three in a series of Native art portfolios originally published. Starting in 1929, by l’Edition d’Art C. Szwedzicki, a small French art press, which are this year being reissued online by the University of Cincinnati Digital Press. 46 LIVING LEGACY: THE AMERICAN INDIAN COLLECTION by Michael Holloman Living Legacy: The American Indian Collection, an ongoing exhibit at the Northwest Museum of Art& Culture. Presents objects acquired from collector William M. Manning in 1916 as ... morewell as many other items drawn from the museum’s Native American collection. 52 READING BETWEEN THE LINES: TEXT AND IMAGE IN CONTEMPORARY NATIVE AMERICAN ART by Kate Morris This article examines the relationship between word and image in contemporary Native American art. Particularly works by Edgar Heap of Birds, George Longfish and Jaune Quick-to-See Smith that are either predominantly textual or combine text with representational imagery. 60“SPIDERS ARE MYSTERIOUS” THE SPIRIT OF THE SPIDER IN LAKOTA ART AND LORE by Ron McCoy Drawing on surviving ethnographic records. This article offers some observations about the use of spider symbolism in Lakota belief and art.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Autumn 1999 Volume 24 Number 4
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 24 | Number 4 | Autumn 1999 18 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 22 MUSEUMS 26 GALLERIES 34 CALENDAR OF AUTUMN EVENTS 38 COCHITI CERAMIC FIGURINES 1880–1915: POSSIBLE SOURCES OF INSPIRATION by Cheri Falkenstien-Doyle Written in conjunction with a show at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian in Santa Fe. New Mexico, this article focuses on figurines made at Cochiti between 1880 and 1915. 48 MARKETING TRADITION: LATE NINETEENTH-CENTURY GWICH’IN CLOTHING EMSEMBLES by Judy Thompson Details a particular type of Gwich’in summer attire— multi-piece ensembles of white caribou hide decorated with porcupine quillwork— which were made in the late nineteenth century but which seem to accurately represent Gwich’in clothing styles of at least one hundred years earlier. 60 NEZ PERCE DECORATIVE ART OF THE 1870s ... moreby Steven L. Grafe Focuses on two groups of Nez Perce items that can be securely dated to the 1870s— the first. Collected for the Centennial Exhibition of 1876 and the second, in the context of the Nez Perce War of 1877. 72 NOT JUST A PRETTY FACE: DOLLS AND HUMAN FIGURINES IN ALASKA NATIVE CULTURES by Angela J. Linn and Molly Lee Written in conjunction with a show currently on view at the University of Alaska Museum in Fairbanks. The article concentrates on the various purposes dolls and human figurines served in Alaska Native cultures during the historic period.
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 Autumn 1998 Volume 23 Number 4
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Autumn 1998 Volume 23 Number 4 Volume 23 | Number 4 | Autumn 1998 17 GALLERIES 20 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 28 CALENDAR OF AUTUMN EVENTS 34 LEGAL BRIEFS by Ron McCoy 38 MUSEUMS 42 TATTOOED BODIES AND SEVERED AURICLES: IMAGES OF NATIVE AMERICAN BODY MODIFICATION IN THE ART OF BENJAMIN WEST by Arthur Einhorn and Thomas S. Abler Examines the nasal and ear ornaments worn by Native American figures in West’s paintings. The body modifications necessary to wear them, and the tattoos that decorated the bodies of these aboriginal North Americans. 54 THE WORK AND INFLUENCE OF MAIDU PAINTER FRANK DAY by Rebecca J. Dobkins Focuses on the development of Day’s career as a painter. And considers the relationships between his work and that of a selection of contemporary artists of Maidu heritage. 68 LOOKING NORTH: THE ETHNOLOGY ... moreCOLLECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA MUSEUM by Molly Lee Gives an overview of the ethnology collection of the University of Alaska Museum. Fairbanks, discusses the types of collectors who have contributed to it and illustrates the collection’s wide range of object types. 80 INDIVIDUALITY AND CULTURAL HISTORY: THE QUESTION OF ARTISTIC LICENSE AND PLAINS REPRESENTATIONAL IMAGERY by Joyce M. Szabo Suggests that while the basic language of Plains drawings was determined by the information required by the images. Individuality did not disappear when these warrior-artists took pen and pencil to paper. 102 BOOK REVIEW THE BIOGRAPHICAL DIRECTORY OF NATIVE AMERICAN PAINTERS by Patrick D. Lester. Reviewed by Kevin W. Smith. Please take a look at my other Rare& Out Of Print Books!
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Autumn 2001 Volume 26 Number 4
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 26 | Number 4 | Autumn 2001 17 GALLERIES 38 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 48 THE CULTURAL AND MULTICULTURAL AESTHETICS OF BAKER LAKE INUIT ARTISTS by Emily A. Auger Discusses art production in Baker Lake. A community on the western side of Hudson Bay in the territory of Nunavut, and then presents the thoughts of six Baker Lake Inuit artists interviewed by the author in 1988. 60 400 YEARS OF NATIVE ART AT THE MASHANTUCKET PEQUOT MUSEUM AND RESEARCH CENTER by Stephen Cook Provides an overview of the museum’s collections. Permanent exhibits and library. The items in these collections help to tell the many stories of Native artists through time and across the North American continent. 68 THE ORIGINS OF HUICHOL YARN PAINTINGS. PART II: STYLES, THEMES AND ARTISTS by Hope MacLean Summarizes the author’s research ... moreon Huichol yarn paintings. With an emphasis on the work of three innovative artists— Guadalupe de la Cruz Rios, Eligio Carrillo Vicente and Mariano Valadez. 78 NAVAJO RING BITS by David M. Brugge and Tobi Taylor Presents research on a little-known type of Navajo horse gear. The ring bit— the most complex object created by Navajo blacksmiths— detailing its history, characteristics and use. 88 LEGAL BRIEFS by Ron McCoy 102 CALENDAR OF AUTUMN EVENTS 108 BOOKS 112 MUSEUMS 120 BOOK REVIEW PRIVILEGING THE PAST: RECONSTRUCTING HISTORY IN NORTHWEST COAST ART by Judith Ostrowwitz. Reviewed by Margaret Dubin. RcmdId ViewItemDescV4,RlogId p4%60bo7%60jtb9%3Fv%7F.rpn35%3E-13ce36b4c19-0x100-
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Spring 2005 Volume 30 Number 2
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 30 | Number 2 | Spring 2005 $6.00 Volume 30 | Number 2 | Spring 2005 17 GALLERIES 24 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 32 EVENTS 38 MUSEUMS 46 LEGAL BRIEFS by Ron McCoy 48 IMAGES OF PRECONTACT NORTHWEST COAST MASKS by Roy Carlson Brings together— for the first time— all of the archaeological evidence for Northwest Coast masks. Which is limited to representations of masks as carvings or effigies on stone, wood or antler objects. 58 EXHIBITION REVIEW OF CONTINUUM: 12 ARTISTS AT THE GEORGE GUSTAV HEYE CENTER. PART 2 by Jo Ortel Review of a series of exhibits on display at the George Gustav Heye Center in New York. This article. Part 2, features works by Nora Naranjo-Morse, George Longfish, Shelley Niro, Judith Lowry, Marie Watt and Jaune Quick-to-See Smith. 66 A PORT TO THE WORLD: NATIVE NORTH AMERICAN COLLECTIONS ... moreAT THE LIVERPOOL MUSEUM by Joanna Ostapkowicz Summarizes the histories of various public collections of Native American material in Liverpool. England, by way of introducing the North American collections of the Liverpool Museum, which— as of this spring— are being shown in a new permanent gallery. 76 PICTURING ZUNI IN THE NEW DEAL ERA: THE CLARA BRIGNAC GONZALES COLLECTION OF ZUNI DAY SCHOOL DRAWINGS AND PAINTINGS. 1925–1945 by Laura Smith Discusses a collection of artwork created by Zuni students that reflects the Zuni worldview as well as the role of art in Indian schools in the decades prior to the Second World War. 88 BOOK REVIEW THE TRANSFORMING IMAGE: PAINTED ARTS OF NORTHWEST COAST FIRST NATIONS by Bill McLennan and Karen Duffek. Reviewed by Steven C. Brown.
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 Autumn 2003 Volume 28 Number 4
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 28 | Number 4 | Autumn 2003 18 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 24 GALLERIES 34 CALENDAR OF AUTUMN EVENTS 42 MUSEUMS 48 REYES GALVAN: A MASTER ZIA POTTER by Dwight P. Lanmon and Francis H. Harlow Summarizes the authors’ research in retracing the life of Zia potter Reyes Galvan. Identifying the stylistic evolution of her pottery and differentiating her work from that of other contemporaneous Zia potters. 60 A STIRRING STORY: NAVAJO AND PUEBLO SPOONS by Cindra Kline Written in conjunction with the first exhibition devoted to Navajo and Pueblo silverware. A Stirring Story: Navajo and Pueblo Spoons. On display at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian. Santa Fe, New Mexico, presents four hundred pieces, in a variety of forms, from the late nineteenth through early twentieth centuries. 70 THE PEARSALL ... moreCOLLECTION OF AMERICAN INDIAN ART: FORTIETH ANNIVERSARY SELECTIONS by Sandra Starr The Pearsall Collection of American Indian Art: Fortieth Anniversary Selection, on display at the Florida Museum of Natural History. Gainesville, showcases 240 objects, from four geographical areas, collected by Leigh Morgan Pearsall. 78 WOOL YARNS IN LATE CLASSIC NAVAJO BLANKETS by Ann Lane Hedlund Drawing on weavings in the Textile Museum in Washington. D.C. this article focuses on the wool yarns found in Navajo Late Classic serape-style blankets and their utility as diagnostic features indicating the source of and period during which the yarns— and therefore the textiles— were produced.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Autumn 2000 Volume 25 Number 4
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 25 | Number 4 | Autumn 2000 20 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 24 GALLERIES 38 ZUNI FETISHES: ART AND CHANGE by Jim Ostler Suggests that contemporary Zuni fetish carving has undergone an artistic revolution in the past two decades and that by working outside the boundaries of traditional aesthetics. Carvers have developed a way to express their creativity without clear ground for criticism. 46 SOUTHEASTERN INDIAN BASKETRY IN THE GILCREASE MUSEUM COLLECTION by Jason Baird Jackson Presents an overview of the southeastern baskets at the Gilcrease Museum. Tulsa, Oklahoma. This article outlines all of the major southeastern basketry types, including those not represented in the Gilcrease Museum’s collection. 56 ALBERT LUJAN: ENTREPRENEURIAL PUEBLO PAINTER OF TOURIST ART by Bradley F. Taylor Presents an overview ... moreof the life and artwork of Albert Lujan(1892–1948) A Taos Pueblo painter who worked in a three-dimensional Euro-American style while focusing his work on village themes that would appeal to the tourist market. 66 NORTHWEST COAST SILVER BRACELETS AND THE USE OF EURO-AMERICAN DESIGNS by Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse Sometime between the 1830s and the 1860s. Northwest Coast silver bracelets became popular among Native American and Euro-Americans alike. Not only are they important to Native traditions— often displaying inherited crests and given as gifts at potlatches— they are also one of the most enduring and widely collected Northwest Coast art forms.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Winter 1995 Volume 21
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Winter 1995. VOLUME 1821 Volume 21 | Number 1 | Winter 1995 TWENTIETH-ANNIVERSARY ISSUE 4 CONTRIBUTORS 20 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 32 GALLERIES 36 MUSEUMS 39 INTRODUCTION: TWENTIETH-ANNIVERSARY ISSUE 40 CLIFFORD BAHNIMPTEWA 42 FRED BEAVER 44 LARRY BECK 46 KENNETH BEGAY 48 LORENCITA BIRD 50 AMIL BLUE LEGS 52 BLACKBEAR BOSIN 54 JULIUS CAESAR 56 T.C. CANNON 58 EUNICE CARNEY 60 CHARLES CHIEF EAGLE 62 HELEN CORDERO 64 WOODY CRUMBO 66 HELEN HARDIN 68 ALLAN HOUSER 70 OSCAR HOWE 72 HENRY HUNT 74 FRED KABOTIE 76 MARIE LEHI 78 CHARLES LOLOMA 80 MARIA MARTINEZ 82 MABEL MCKAY 84 MURIEL NAVASIE 86 MELVIN OLANNA 88 SELINA PERATROVICH 90 POLINGAYSI QÖYAWAYMA 92 JIM SCHPPERT 94 WILLARD STONE 96 DAISY TAUGLECHEE 98 JENNIE THLUNAUT 105 CALENDAR OF SPRING EVENTS 121 BOOK REVIEW 128 MUSEUM ACQUISITIONS 143 ADVERTISER ... moreINDEX 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!
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Autumn 1989 Number 4 Volume 14
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Autumn 1989 Number 4 Volume 14 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 NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE - SPRING 1976 ISSUE
American Indian Art Magazine. Spring. 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" 86 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 - AUTUMN 1978--SPECIAL PLAINS ISSUE
OFFERED FOR AUCTION TYPE SALE IS THIS SPECIAL PLAINS ISSUE OF AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE. AUTUMN 1978. 88 PAGES, LOTS OF INTERESTING ADVERTISEMENTS, AND GREAT HISTORICAL ARTICLES.
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.
ANTIQUE NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE - AUTUMN 1979
American Indian Art magazine. Autumn of 1979. Very little cover wear. Inside is very good. Only ship to lower 48 states. 1.RcmdId ViewItemDescV4,RlogId p4%60bo7%60jtb9%3Fuk.rp73%28b0g%60%60%3E1-14b76dbe921-0x107-