Selected Bibliography and References Cited
Adams, E. Charles (editor).
1996 River of Change: Prehistory of the Middle Little Colorado River Valley, Arizona. Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona Press, Tucson.
Allen, Laura Graves
1984 Contemporary Hopi Pottery. Museum of Northern Arizona Press, Flagstaff.
Ashton, Robert, Jr.
1976 Nampeyo and Lesou. American Indian Art Magazine 1(3):24–33.
Bartlett, Katharine, and Francis H. Harlow
1978 An Introduction to Hopi Pottery. Museum of Northern Arizona Press, Flagstaff.
Blair, Mary Ellen, and Laurence Blair
1999 The Legacy of a Master Potter: Nampeyo and Her Descendants. Treasure Chest Books, Tucson.
Breazeale, J. F.
1923 The Pima and His Basket. Arizona Archaeological Society, Tucson.
Bunzel, Ruth L.
1972 The Pueblo Potter: A Study of Creative Imagination in Primitive Art. 1929 Reprint. Dover Publications, New York.
Collins, John E.
1974 Nampeyo, Hopi Pottery: Her Artistry and Legacy. Muckenthaler Cultural Center, Fullerton, California.
Colton, Harold S., and Mary-Russell Farrell Colton
1943 An Appreciation of the Art of Nampeyo and Her Influence on Hopi Pottery. Plateau 15(1):44–45.
Dillingham, Rick
1994 Fourteen Families in Pueblo Pottery. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.
Dozier, Edward
1966 Hano, a Tewa Community in Arizona. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York.
Eddy, Jordan
2024 Modernware: The Allure and Tension in Defining Nampeyo, an Iconic Pueblo Potter, as a Modernist. Southwest Contemporary 9:44–51.
Elmore, Steve
2015 In Search of Nampeyo: The Early Years, 1875–1892. Spirit Bird Press, Santa Fe.
Ferg, Alan
2014 Arizona State Museum. Images of America. Arcadia Publishing, Charleston, South Carolina.
Fewkes, Jesse Walter
1896 Preliminary Account of an Expedition to the Cliff Villages of the Red Rock Country, and the Tusayan Ruins of Sikyatki and Awatobi, Arizona in 1895. In Sixteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Smithsonian Institution for 1895, pp. 557–588. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.
1919 Designs on Prehistoric Hopi Pottery. In Thirty-Third Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Smithsonian Institution for 1911–1912, pp. 207–284. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.
Finger, Judith W., and Andrew D. Finger
2006 Circles of Life: Katsina Imagery on Hopi Wicker Basketry. Grace Hudson Museum, Ukiah, California.
Graves, Laura
1998 Thomas Varker Keam: Indian Trader. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.
Haury, Emil W.
1988 Gila Pueblo Archaeological Foundation: A History and Some Personal Notes. Kiva 54(1):i–ix, 1–77.
Hays, Kelley Ann, and Diane Dittemore
1990 Seven Centuries of Hopi Pottery. American Indian Art Magazine 15(3):56–65.
Hays-Gilpin, Kelley A.
2013 Sikyatki Polychrome: Style, Iconography, Cross-Media Comparisons, and Organization of Production. Kiva 79(2):175–204.
Higgins, Andrew T.
2013 Five Collectors and 500 Baskets at the Arizona State Museum. American Indian Art Magazine 39(1):34–43.
King, Charles S.
2017 Spoken Through Clay: Native Pottery of the Southwest: The Eric S. Dobkin Collection. Museum of New Mexico Press, Santa Fe.
Kramer, Barbara
1988 Nampeyo, Hopi House, and the Chicago Land Show. American Indian Art Magazine 14(1):46–53.
1996 Nampeyo and Her Pottery. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.
1897 The Land of Sunshine : a Southern California magazine. Vol. 6, January 1897.
Messier, Kim, and Pat Messier
2007 Hopi and Pueblo Tiles: An Illustrated History. Rio Nuevo Press, Tucson.
Nequatewa, Edmund
1943 Nampeyo, Famous Hopi Potter. Plateau 15(3):40–42.
Parsons, Elsie Clews (editor)
1999 Hopi Journal of Alexander M. Stephen. 2 vols. Reprint of Columbia University Contributions to Anthropology 23. Columbia University Press, New York.
Patterson, Alex
1994 Hopi Pottery Symbols. Johnson Books, Boulder, Colorado.
Peterson, Susan
1997 Pottery by American Indian Women: the Legacy of Generations. National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C.
Schaaf, Gregory
1998 Hopi-Tewa Pottery: 500 Artist Biographies. CIAC Press, Santa Fe.
Schramm, David S.
2013 Righting the Record: Attributing a “Unique” Pottery Vessel to Nampeyo. American Indian Art Magazine 38(4):68–81.
2014 The Pots that Launched a Revolution (or at Least a Revival). American Indian Art Magazine 40(1):56–69.
Smith, Watson
1957 Victor Rose Stoner, 1893–1957. The Kiva 23(2):1–3.
Stanislawski, Michael Barr
1979 Hopi-Tewa. In Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 9: Southwest, edited by Alfonso Ortiz, pp. 587–602. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
Stanislawski, Michael Barr, Ann Hitchcock, and Barbara B. Stanislawski
1976 Identification Marks on Hopi and Hopi-Tewa Pottery. Plateau 48(3–4):47–65.
Struever, Martha Hopkins
2001 Painted Perfection: The Pottery of Dextra Quotskuyva. Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, Santa Fe.
Traugott, Joseph
1999 Fewkes and Nampeyo: Clarifying a Myth-understanding. In Native American Art in the Twentieth Century: Makers, Meanings, Histories, edited by W. Jackson Rushing III, pp. 7–19. Routledge Press, London and New York.
Wade, Edwin L., and Allan Cooke
2012 Canvas of Clay: Seven Centuries of Hopi Ceramic Art. Otro Lado Press, Sedona, Arizona.
2022 The Call of Beauty: Masterworks by Nampeyo of Hopi. Otro Lado Press, Sedona, Arizona.
Wade, Edwin L., and Lea S. McChesney
1980 America’s Great Lost Expedition: The Thomas Keam Collection of Hopi Pottery from the Second Hemenway Expedition, 1890–1894. The Heard Museum, Phoenix.
1981 Historic Hopi Ceramics: the Thomas Keam Collection of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University. Peabody Museum Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Watts, Jennifer A.
2005–2006 Photography in the Land of Sunshine: Charles Fletcher Lummis and the Regional Ideal. Southern California Quarterly 87(4):339–376.
Wyckoff, Lydia L.
1990 Designs and Factions. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.
2000 Credits
The original version of A Nampeyo Showcase was developed in 2000 by Ethnological Collections Curator Diane Dittemore, ASM Photographer Ken Matesich, and Curatorial Assistant Andy Tafoya.
Dr. E. Charles Adams contributed the text regarding Sikyatki and consulted on general content. Mike Jacobs, Archaeological Collections Curator, provided access to the protohistoric pottery and documentation for it. Dr. R. Gwinn Vivian, Curator of Archaeology, arranged the funding.
Author Barbara Kramer gave freely of her knowledge about Nampeyo and carefully critiqued the original site content. Her biography of Nampeyo served as an inspiration for this project.
The Southwest Museum (now the Autry Museum) and the Seaver Center of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County granted permission to use their images.
2024 Revisions
This 2024 update benefits from new photographs taken by ASM Photographer Max Mijn. Research and publications within the last two decades have added substantially to our understanding of Nampeyo, her family, and their collective artistic output. Insights gained from these resources have been integrated into the text. A Nampeyo Showcase also highlights acquisitions of Nampeyo’s pottery received since 2000 and newly identified works in existing collections.