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Hopi Indian Kachina Doll Carving Collector Ref w Art Symbolism Examples, Artists

$ 5.25

Availability: 52 in stock
  • Language: English
  • Publication Year: 1986
  • Condition: Brand New
  • Format: Paperback
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Type: Book
  • Type of Item: Book

    Description

    Collector Bookstore
    724 Delaware Street
    Leavenworth, KS 66048
    Collector Bookstore is a leading specialty retailer of price guides and reference books to inform and educate collectors and professionals in the antiques and collectors markets. Our customers include individual collectors, dealers, appraisers, auctioneers & other industry professionals. You won't receive heavily thumbed shelf copies from us! We buy most titles directly from the publisher and individual authors. Authors are encouraged to submit their reference titles for our consideration.
    SO-SCH-1986-0887400620-WH3
    The Hopi Approach to the Art of Kachina Doll Carving by: Erik Bromberg
    ISBN:
    0887400620
    Book Title:
    The Hopi Approach to the Art of Kachina Doll Carving
    Author:
    Erik Bromberg
    Binding:
    Soft Cover
    Copyright:
    1986
    Pages:
    96
    Size:
    8.5 x 11 in.
    Collector Bookstore is a retailer of new books located in Leavenworth, Kansas. We specialize in price guides and reference books for the antiques and collectibles industry.
    The beautiful diversity of Hopi Kachina dolls is pictorially presented to show past, present, and evolving styles. These carved representations of ceremonial figures taking part in celebration of the Kachina religion are highly collected by Indian and white peoples alike. This book serves to explain, compare, and present the variety of dolls that are found through color pictures, line drawings and a concise text. The carvers are given a great deal of recognition throughout the book as the discussion covers the environment, tools, and prominence of these artists. An appendix lists 495 living artists. An introduction is by Frederick Dockstader, former director to the Museum of the American Indian in New York. Mr. Bromberg, a trader among the Hopi, shares his accumulated respect for the culture and people who produce them. His chapters evolved to answer questions by collectors and gallery workers. The result is a first-hand analysis of this contemporary and still changing art form that has both religious and commercial impact on the Hopi carvers. Only a trusted, sympathetic student of the Hopi culture could have compiled the background interpretations of the dolls and won the respect of the carvers.
    164 photos & drawings
    (SO Schiffer Categorical generated 2022-08-26)
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