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Source: The Open Library

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1It's in the details

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“It's in the details” Metadata:

  • Title: It's in the details
  • Author:
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: Median: 61
  • Publisher: ➤  Published by the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, c2014.
  • Publish Date:
  • Publish Location: Santa Fe, NM

“It's in the details” Subjects and Themes:

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Access and General Info:

  • First Year Published: 2014
  • Is Full Text Available: No
  • Is The Book Public: No
  • Access Status: No_ebook

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List of Native American artists

Kiowa/Kiowa Apache beadwork artist (1953–2022) Marcus Amerman, Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma Imogene Goodshot Arquero (Oglala Lakota), beadwork artist Martha

Iroquois

included (from east to west) the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and Seneca. After 1722, the Iroquoian-speaking Tuscarora people from the southeast

Indian Handcraft Series

Titles: Quill and Beadwork of the Western Sioux, by Carrie A. Lyford Navajo Native Dyes, by Nonabah Bryan and Stella Young Seneca Splint Basketry, by

Institute of American Indian Arts

Coast areas of Indian Country." Imogene Goodshot Arquero, Oglala Lakota beadwork artist Louis W. Ballard, Quapaw/Cherokee composer Gregory Cajete, Santa

List of Indigenous artists of the Americas

1953–2022 Marcus Amerman, Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma Imogene Goodshot Arquero, beadwork artist Martha Berry, Cherokee Nation Chipeta, Plains Apache, c. 1843–1924

List of Native Americans of the United States

Kiowa artist James Auchiah, Kiowa artist Martha Berry, Cherokee Nation beadwork artist Kelly Church, (Pottawatomi/Odawa/Ojibwe) basket maker, painter,

Oneida people

downwards. Oneida women on the other hand would wear beaded tiaras. The beadwork on the tiaras would most commonly be sewn in woodland designs as it is

List of Native American women of the United States

professor Katrina Mitten, Miami Tribe of Oklahoma beadwork artist Catherine Montour (1710–1804), Seneca leader Mountain Wolf Woman (1884–1960), Ho-Chunk

Oneida Nation of Wisconsin

women's dance and ceremonial collar, made in the Haudenosaunee raised-beadwork style by Karen Ann Hoffman (Oneida Nation), c. 2007, in the collection

Santa Fe Indian Market

represented; however, the first place award for best tribal display went to beadwork from Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes of the Fort Peck Indian Reservation in