PUEBLO INDIAN TEXTILES A Living Tradition [SOLD]


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Kate Peck Kent
  • Subject: Native American Textiles
  • Item # C4376N
  • Date Published: Hardback with slipcover, first edition, 1983
  • Size: 118 pages, exceptional illustrations
  • SOLD

PUEBLO INDIAN TEXTILES A Living Tradition

by Kate Peck Kent

School of American Research Press, Santa Fe

Hardback with slipcover, first edition, 1983, 118 pages, exceptional illustrations


“For the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico and Arizona, the tradition of weaving and decorating textiles reaches almost two thousand years into the past.  Yet because the Pueblos seldom make their traditional textiles for sale to visitors and collectors, their weaving and embroidery have long been overshadowed in popular attention by the better-known textiles of the Navajos.  Pueblo Indian Textiles: A Living Tradition now helps redress this imbalance by testifying to the beauty, the technical skill, the historical significance, and the cultural authenticity of this centuries-old Pueblo tradition.

“Kate Peck Kent begins with the history of Pueblo textile arts, devoting special attention to changes and continuities since the Spanish conquest.  Next, she describes the sometimes unique technologies used by Pueblo craftspeople, many of which remain untouched by outside influence.  Finally, she examines the various kinds of Pueblo garments, tracing the origins of many of them back to prehistoric times.  Whenever possible, Kent explains the symbolic and cultural meaning that textiles and their designs have held for the Pueblo people.”

Example page from this book.

Kate Peck Kent
  • Subject: Native American Textiles
  • Item # C4376N
  • Date Published: Hardback with slipcover, first edition, 1983
  • Size: 118 pages, exceptional illustrations
  • SOLD

Publisher:
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