Posts Tagged “People”

Product Description
Despite the centrality of ceramics to Mojave culture, Mojave pottery is virtually unknown today. Museums have mostly small, unrepresentative, and largely undocumented collections, and the works have received little attention from scholars and collectors.This comprehensive volume brings to light the wondrously inventive clay people, mythological creatures, and effigy vessels of the Mojave people, recording this Southwest Indian ceramic art in more than 50 full-color plates, 25 color and black-and-white illustrations, and a complete catalog of the Dillingham Collection of Mojave Ceramics, one of the largest and most complete Mojave assemblages in the world, at the Indian Arts Research Center of the School of American Research. Jill Leslie Furst takes an ethnohistorical approach here, drawing on written literature about the tribe that ranges from seventeenth-century Spanish documents to ethnographic accounts from the 1970s. The stories of the Mojaves-along with descriptions of family life, gender roles, subsistence activities, clothing and personal adornment, shamanism, and the afterlife-form the context for Furst’s exploration of the Mojave ceramic tradition.

Mojave Pottery, Mojave People: The Dillingham Collection of Mojave Ceramics

Comments No Comments »

 
 

Product Description

This new guide is the first to explore all facets of Native American jewelry—its history, variety, and quality—in one convenient resource. With coverage beginning in the mid-nineteenth century, this resource includes artists, techniques, materials, motifs, and more. The encyclopedia opens with helpful introductory essay to acquaint the reader with the subject. More than 350 entries and over 80 photos make this new encyclopedia and exceptional value.

Encyclopedia of Native American Jewelry: A Guide to History, People, and Terms

Comments No Comments »

 
 

We the People

Comments No Comments »

 
 

Product Description
Color-packed volume brings to stunning life 1,000-year-old Native American ceramic pottery. 163 illustrations.

To Touch the Past: The Painted Pottery of the Mimbres People

Comments 1 Comment »

 
 

Product Description
Did the prehistoric peoples of the southwest have a written form of communication? What do their symbols really mean? What secrets from the past can we unlock? Archaeologist James Cunkle is researching the Raven Site Ruin in the White Mountains of Arizona and from that site is putting back together the pieces of pre-history. The Talking Pots of the past now share their secrets.

Talking Pots: Deciphering the Symbols of a Prehistoric People : A Study of the Prehistoric Pottery Icons of the White Mountains of Arizona

Comments 3 Comments »

 
 

Powered by Yahoo! Answers