Probably no Native American handicrafts are more widely admired than Navajo weaving and Navajo and Pueblo silver work.
He discusses standards and qualities of Indian silv.
He tells both of the fine pieces made for trade among the Indians themselves and of the newer, cheaper types of jewelry produced for sale to tourists.
Adair gives full details, as he observed them, of the methods and techniques of manufacture over a primitive forge with homemade tools.
Mr.
There are men still living today who remember the very first silversmiths.
Despite its present high stage of development, with its many subtle and often exquisite designs, the art of working silver is not an ancient one among the Navajo and Pueblo Indians.
The Navajo and Pueblo Silversmiths provides a full history of the craft and the actual names and localities of the pioneer craftsmen who introduced the art of the silversmith to their people.
Later, as field worker for the Indian Arts and Crafts Board, he studied the economics of Navajo and Pueblo silversmithing; and still later he became manager of the Navajo Arts and Crafts Guild, a tribal enterprise.
He spent months among the Indians in New Mexico and Arizona and became personally acquainted with many of their silversmiths.
Many of the photographs he made at the time are used as illustrations in this book.
He lived for a time among the Navajo, watched them make their jewelry, and actually learned to work silver himself in the hogan of one of the leading artisans, Tom Burnsides.
He visited trading posts in the Indian country and examined and photographed silver on the pawn racks and in important private collections.
Adair made an exhaustive examination of the principal museum collections of Navajo and Pueblo silver work, both early and modem, in Santa Fe, Colorado Springs, Chicago, New York, and Philadelphia.
To prepare his book, Mr.
John Adair is a trained ethnologist who has lived and worked among these Indians. that the conscientious narrative is surrounded by an atmosphere of genuinely exciting visual experience.
So richly decorative are the plates he uses ...
With the care of a meticulous and thorough scholar, the author has told the story of his several years\' investigation of jewelry making among the Southwestern Indians, says The Dallas Times Herald.
This book, which is now in its third large printing, contains the most important and complete account of Indian jewelry fashioned by the Navajo, the Zuni, the Hopi, and other Pueblo peoples.
Probably no Native American handicrafts are more widely admired than Navajo weaving and Navajo and Pueblo silver work