Object Details
Author
Bernstein, Bruce
Subject
Santa Fe Indian Market History
Contents
"The hour has arrived" : the 1922 Indian Fair -- Pottery for the tourist trade -- Maria and Julian Martinez and the pottery revival -- The road to Indian Fair -- Santa Fe Fiesta and Indian Fair: 1923 to 1926 -- The Fair committee takes over: 1927 to 1931 -- Transition: 1932 to 1940 -- Stagnation and change: 1940 to 1967 -- Today's Indian market: a remarkable phenomenon
Summary
Each August, one hundred thousand people attend Indian Market in Santa Fe, New Mexico, the nation's largest and most anticipated Native arts event. One thousand artists, representing 160 tribes, nations, and villages from the United States and Canada, proudly display and sell their works of art, ranging from pottery and basketry to contemporary paintings and sculptures. The history of Indian Market as related in this book is the story of Indian cultural arts in the twentieth century beginning with Edgar L. Hewett and the founding of the Museum of New Mexico in Santa Fe in 1909. At the turn of the last century, the notion of Indian art as art in its own right and not ethnography was a foreign concept. With the arrival of the railroad and tourism in New Mexico, two thousand years of utilitarian Pueblo pottery tradition gave way to a curio trade intended for visitors to the area. The curators and archaeologists at the Museum of New Mexico began to collect prehistoric and historic pottery and encouraged potters to make pottery modeled on traditional ideas thought to represent authentic culture. Maria and Julian Martinez countered the idea that art was a matter of studying the past when in 1922, at the first "Indian Fair", they introduced their revolutionary Black-on-black pottery. The author links these early developments to Indian Market's ninety-year relationship with Native arts, cultural movements, historical events, and the ever-evolving creativity of Native artists to shape their market.
Date
2012
C2012
Type
Books
Physical description
151 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 26 cm
Place
New Mexico
Santa Fe
Santa Fe (N.M.)
Data Source
Smithsonian Libraries
Topic
Indian art--History
Indians of North America--Commerce--History
Markets--History
Tourism--History
Social life and customs
Record ID
siris_sil_1001517