Posts Tagged ‘Native American design motifs’

New Book: Southwestern Indian Rings

Southwestern Indian RingsSouthwestern Indian Rings

by Paula A. Baxter
Photography by Barry Katzen

Visit Amazon for its discounted price

With a fascinating variety of American Indian rings from the southwestern United States shown in more than 360 color photos, Southwestern Indian Rings
provides a design history of these rings, beginning with pre-contact artifacts and continuing through to contemporary artistic innovations.

The text surveys key developments in Native American ring design; materials and methods of construction; definitions for historical and vintage rings; master innovators; and the transition from craft to wearable art since 1980.

Shortly after the Civil War, Native American artisans began making silver rings set with turquoise, coral, jet, mother-of-pearl, and colored shell, adding lapis, malachite, onyx, and petrified wood over the decades. More recently, artisans began utilizing gold and such non-traditional settings as opals and diamonds, among others.

Works by Navajo and Pueblo artists are featured, although Apache, Northern Cheyenne, and Sonoran Desert Native jewelers are also included. A guide to valuation issues and resources is offered for collectors.

978-0-7643-3875-5
hardcover $34.99 (but Amazon is giving a discount)
8 1/2 x 11
160 pages
361 color photos



Man in the Maze

The Tohono O’odham reservation abuts the city limits of Tucson. These Sonoran Desert dwellers, who were known as the Papago Indians in less enlightened times, are particularly known for their basket and object weaving. They are also masters of an important design motif: the man in the maze.

Dating to the pre-contact era, this design symbolizes a keen understanding of man’s physical and metaphysical existence. Today, the man in the maze motif appears on many Southwestern Native arts, including jewelry.