Adobe Gallery Blog

Nineteenth Century Coin Silver Pictorial Navajo Spoon - C3393B

Category: Jewelry | Posted by Todd | Tue, Jun 11th 2013, 3:57pm

Navajo-made silver spoons with an Indian head profile at the end of the handle first appeared in Indian trader J. L. Hubbell's 1902 pamphlet.  Hubbell assured his clients that these were made by Navajo silversmiths and were made from coin silver.

 

This spoon features an Indian head with feather bonnet in profile at the end of the handle and two arrows stamped in the bowl.  Spoons were priced by weight of silver and not by their aesthetics.  Spoons such as these were highly sought by tourists traveling on the trains to the southwest.  They were attractive items, easily transported and easily displayed when back at home.

 

This spoon comes with a metal display stand fabricated specifically for this item.

 

Condition:  there is a small crack on one edge of the bowl and the handle may have been repaired near the area of the bowl of this spoon.

Provenance:  Coulter Brooks Gallery, Santa Fe

                      private collection of a Virginia family

Recommended ReadingNavajo Spoons: Indian Artistry and the Souvenir Trade, 1880s - 1940s by Cindra Kline


Subject: Nineteenth Century Coin Silver Pictorial Navajo Spoon
Unknown Maker
Category: Silverware
Origin: Diné - Navajo Nation
Medium: coin silver
Size: 4-5/8" long
Item # C3393B

Navajo-made silver spoons with an Indian head profile at the end of the handle first appeared in Indian trader J. L. Hubbell's 1902 pamphlet.  Hubbell assured his clients that these were made by Navajo silversmiths and were made from coin silver.    This spoon features an Indian head with feather bonnet in profile at the end of the handle and two arrows stamped in the bowl.  Spoons were priced by weight of silver and not by their aesthetics.  Spoons such as these were highly sought by tourists traveling on the trains to the southwest.  They were attractive items, easily transported and easily displayed when back at home.   This spoon comes with a metal display stand fabricated specifically for this item.   Condition:  there is a small crack on one edge of the bowl and the handle may have been repaired near the area of the bowl of this spoon. Provenance:  Coulter Brooks Gallery, Santa Fe                          private collection of a Virginia family Recommended Reading; Navajo Spoons: Indian Artistry and the Souvenir Trade, 1880s - 1940s by Cindra Kline