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Location: Los Angeles, United States
Tribal Art Magazine Issue #62 - Winter 2011. 144 page magazine of the highest quality. Good condition with only a small ding in lower corner of spine. ... moreSEE THE OTHER FINE TRIBAL ART BOOKS I HAVE LISTED.
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8.5”x11”, color illustrations. Minor soil, light wear.
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8.5”x11”, color illustrations. Minor soil, light wear.
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Location: Northampton, United States
8.5”x11”, color illustrations. Minor soil, light wear.
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Tribal Art Magazine Issue #58 - Winter 2010. One of the most wonderful issues of this magazine! 146 page magazine of the highest quality. Very good condition. ... moreSEE THE OTHER FINE TRIBAL ART BOOKS I HAVE LISTED.
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Location: Medinah, United States
Native American Indian Art Magazine Winter 2002 Vol.28 No.1. Great Color Photos.
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Tribal Art Magazine Issue #33 - Winter 2003. 138 page magazine of the highest quality. Very good condition. SEE THE OTHER FINE TRIBAL ART BOOKS I HAVE ... moreLISTED.
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Tribal Art magazine #29 - Winter 2002. 138 page magazine of the highest quality. SEE THE OTHER FINE TRIBAL ART BOOKS I HAVE LISTED.
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Tribal Art magazine #24 - Autumn/Winter 2000. 128 page magazine of the highest quality. MOST PAGES ARE COMING LOOSE AND BINDING NEEDS TO BE REGLUED. Still ... morecomplete and enjoyable. SEE THE OTHER FINE TRIBAL ART BOOKS I HAVE LISTED.
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Location: Oakland, United States
The World of Tribal Arts Magazine, Winter 1997. I have a number of Tribal Arts and Tribal Art issues for sale.
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The World of Tribal Arts Magazine, Winter 1995/96. I have a number of Tribal Arts and Tribal Art issues for sale.
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Tribal Arts magazine #16 - Winter 1997. 106 page magazine of the highest quality. Nice clean copy. SEE THE OTHER FINE TRIBAL ART BOOKS I HAVE LISTED.
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Location: Lummi Island, United States
Seven boat pits have been identified around the Great Pyramid. Five of which belong to the Great Pyramid proper. The other 2 are associated with the pyramid ... moreof Hetepheres and the pyramid of the Ka.
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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 Winter 2005 Volume 31 Number 1
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 31 | Number 1 | Winter 2005 THIRTIETH-ANNIVERSARY POTTERY ISSUE 17 GALLERIES 24 MUSEUMS 34 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 41 INTRODUCTION 42 SANTA ANA PUEBLO POTTERY by Francis H. Harlow. Dwight P. Lanmon and Duane Anderson Until about 1760 the pottery made at Santa Ana and Zia Pueblos. In New Mexico, was virtually indistinguishable in material, form and design. This article focuses on changes in pottery styles at Santa Ana Pueblo from about 1760 to the early 1900s, based on evidence not heretofore available. 54 MARIA POVEKA MARTINEZ: HER LIFE. HER POTTERY, HER LEGACY AT THE MILLICENT ROGERS MUSEUM by Shelby J. Tisdale Recounts the life and career of San Ildefonso potter Maria Poveka Martinez. Who led a revival in Pueblo pottery making in the early twentieth century and whose influence gave rise to the ... moreacceptance of pottery as an art form. The article presents examples of Maria’s work from the Millicent Rogers Museum, Taos, New Mexico, which has an extensive collection of Maria’s pottery, pottery-making tools and memorabilia. 64 PUEBLO POTTERY: FOLK ART TO FINE ART by Charles King Presenting works by fifteen contemporary Pueblo potters. This article examines the significant changes in Pueblo pottery over the past thirty years, as well as the evolving perception of pottery as fine art. 72 PUEBLO MAN-WOMAN POTTERS AND THE POTTERY MADE BY THE LAGUNA MAN-WOMAN. ARROH-A-OCH by Dwight P. Lanmon Offers a detailed analysis of the design features of the only known storage jar by Arroh-a-och. One of the best-known of Pueblo man-woman potters; and on the basis of this analysis speculates that several other jars, closely related in various ways, were also made by him. 88 CALENDAR OF WINTER EVENTS
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Winter 2002 Volume 28 Number 1
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 28 | Number 1 | Winter 2002 17 GALLERIES 28 CALENDAR OF WINTER EVENTS 32 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 38 MUSEUMS 44 NAICHE’S DEER HIDE PAINTINGS: A CONSIDERATION by Cécile R. Ganteaume This article examines nine extant paintings by Chiricahua Apache leader Naiche that portray the girl’s puberty ceremony gáhé dance. A ritual that was and still is an expression of Chiricahua culture and identity. 56 UNCOMMON LEGACIES by John R. Grimes. Mary Lou Curran and Thomas Haukaas An overview of the exhibition Uncommon Legacies: Native American Art from the Peabody Essex Museum. Which focuses on objects collected before 1860 by maritime merchants, explorers, soldiers and missionaries. 64 WOVEN CHANTWAYS: THE RED ROCK REVIVAL by Jennifer McLerran Discusses how the combined efforts of several Navajo ... moreweavers in the Red Rock. Arizona area, trading post owners Troy and Edith Kennedy and collector Edwin Kennedy resulted in the production of more than ninety textiles bearing sandpainting imagery. 74 TRACKING SOME CHARACTERISTICS OF ASSINIBOIN QUILLWORK AND BEADWORK by David Sager Illuminates some facets of Assiniboin quillwork and beadwork. Concentrating in particular on the evolution of these forms and the influences of neighboring tribes.
AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE Winter 2000 Volume 26 Number 1
American Indian Art Magazine Volume 26 | Number 1 | Winter 2000 TWENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE: SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION’S NATIONAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHIVES 20 AUCTION BLOCK by Harmer Johnson 28 GALLERIES 38 MUSEUMS 46 CALENDAR OF WINTER EVENTS 52 INTRODUCTION: TWENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY 54 THE ARTWORK COLLECTION OF THE NATIONAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHIVES: AN AMERICAN TREASURE by Candace Greene Provides an overview of the holdings of the National Anthropological Archives. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. the world’s finest collection of Native American drawings and paintings from the nineteenth century and the early part of the twentieth century. 66 SEARCHING THE SOURCE: ORIGINS OF INDIAN PAINTING IN THE NATIONAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHIVES by Edwin L. Wade Discusses some of the most important nineteenth-century Native American works in ... morethe National Anthropological Archives. Demonstrating that the full range and significance of these drawings have not yet been fully appreciated by mainstream art historians. 74 HUNTERS OF THE HUNTER’S WORLD: SOME REFLECTIONS ON INNU AND INUIT DRAWINGS IN THE NATIONAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHIVES by Stephen Long By presenting historic and modern drawings from the Canadian Arctic that are now housed in the National Anthropological Archives. The author shows how the historic images reveal deep connections between the Innu and the Inuit and the natural world, and how they presage the symbolic presentation of animals and spirits that has become a hallmark of contemporary Inuit art. 82 COLLECTING LAKOTA HISTORIES: WINTER COUNT PICTOGRAPHS AND TEXTS IN THE NATIONAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHIVES by Christina E. Burke Discusses the National Anthropological Archives’ collection of winter counts— yearly pictographic calendars created by the Lakota Sioux to mark the passing of each winter with a significant event— as well as associated documents relating to the creation. Collection, translation and interpretation of these unique records.
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!
Important Tribal Art Magazine Winter 2003 #33
Valuable Tribal Art Magazine Winter 2003. Number 33 excellent condition 138 pages full color images Masterpieces of African Art in Rio and Turin. The Baselitz Collection, Statuary of the Yaka, A Hawaiian Feather Cloak, The mysterious world of Paul Rabut and much more. Take a moment to view my other listings including more Tribal Art Magazines.
ANTIQUE AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE - WINTER 1981 VOL. 7 NO. 1--TEXTILE ISSUE-
OFFERED FOR AUCTION TYPE SALE IS THIS SPECIAL PLAINS ISSUE OF AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE. WINTER 1981. 94 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.
Tribal Art Magazine Winter 2006 #43 Papuan Gulf Art
Tribal Art Magazine Winter 2006. Number 43 good condition. Slight fade on the exterior border, creases on edges, typical wear 168 pages full color images Featured articles: Art of the Papuan Gulf. The Disney/Tishman Collection of African Art, Rasmussen's Eskimo Masks and much more. Take a moment to view my other listings including more Tribal Art Magazines.
Tribal Art Magazine Winter 2007/2008 #47
Tribal Art Magazine Winter 2007/2008. Number 47 good condition. Slight fade on the exterior border, typical wear 178 pages full color images Featured articles: Oceanic Art at the MET and the National Gallery of Australia. Bisj Poles, Whitecloud in New Orleans, Cameroon: Art of the Kings, Animals in the Sculptural Arts of Africa and much more. Take a moment to view my other listings including more Tribal Art Magazines.
Important Tribal Art Magazine, back issue Winter 2003
Tribal. The magazine of tribal art Winter 2003 issue. 33 pre-owned. Excellent condition 138 pages. Full color catalog Featured articles: African Masterpieces in Turin. Khosi Sculptures Among the Yaka and their Neighbors. A Hawaiian Feather Cloak: witness to a failed encounter. The Mysterious World of Paul Rabut. Slingshots of Guatemala. African Art in Rio de Janeiro. and much more