Ancient Puebloan people The
Ancestral Puebloans, or Anasazi (up to 1400 CE) are the ancestors of today's
Pueblo tribes. Their culture formed in the American Southwest after the cultivation of corn was introduced from
Mesoamerica about 4,000 years ago. People of this region developed an agrarian lifestyle and lived in sedentary towns. Common early pottery included corrugated gray ware pottery and decorated black-on-white pottery. Corrugated pottery was made from coils of clay wound into the desired shape and the clay is pinched, which created the corrugated texture. White on black evolved as a decorative pottery and was often used as a trade good for food.
Sikyátki, a former Hopi village in
Arizona inhabited from the 14th through the 16th centuries, is the source of polychrome pottery. Around 300 CE the
Hohokam culture developed in Arizona. They are the ancestors of the
Tohono O'odham and
Akimel O'odham or Pima tribes. The
Mimbres, a subgroup of the
Mogollon culture, are especially notable for the narrative paintings on their pottery. File:Prehistoric olla, Rock Art Ranch.jpg|Ancestral Pueblo
olla, Cibola Whiteware, northeast Arizona File:Chaco_Anasazi abajo black-on-orange trade ware NPS.jpg|Anasazi bowl (trade ware) dating from 900-1100 AD, excavated at
Chaco Culture National Historical Park File:Mimbres Bowl with rabbit DMA 1988-95-FA.jpg|Mimbres Bowl with rabbit, AD 1000–1150 File:Sikyatkibowlwithdragonfly.png|Sikyátki dragonfly bowl, about 1400-1625 AD
Turquoise, jet, and spiny oyster shell have been traditionally used by Ancestral Pueblo for jewelry, and they developed sophisticated
inlay techniques centuries ago. The
Ancestral Puebloans (Anasazi) of the
Chaco Canyon and surrounding region are believed to have prospered greatly from their production and trading of turquoise objects.
Native American nations Within the last millennium,
Athabaskan peoples emigrated from northern Canada in the southwest. These include the
Navajo and
Apache.
Sandpainting is an aspect of Navajo healing ceremonies that inspired an art form. Navajos learned to weave on upright looms from Pueblos and wove blankets that were eagerly collected by
Great Basin and
Plains tribes in the 18th and 19th centuries. After the introduction of the railroad in the 1880s, imported blankets became plentiful and inexpensive, so Navajo weavers switched to producing
rugs for trade.
Pueblo,
Navajo and
Apache tribes cherished turquoise for its amuletic use; the latter tribe believe the stone to afford the
archer dead aim. Among these peoples turquoise was used in
mosaic inlay, in sculptural works, and was fashioned into toroidal beads and freeform pendants. The distinctive
silver jewelry produced by the Navajo and other Southwestern Native American tribes today is a rather modern development, thought to date from c. 1880 as a result of European influences.
Colonial Spanish With a need to be self-sufficient, many Hispanic people woodworking, weaving, tinsmith, farming and leather work skills to create the furniture and furnishings for their homes.
Anglo-Americans Ancient artistic traditions have been manifested in native craft for generations when Europeans began to settle in the American Southwest; an important acknowledgement for understanding the inherent aesthetic allure of this area to the
Anglo-American artists.
Integration of influences Silverworking was adopted by native
Southwest artists beginning in the 1850s, when Mexican silversmiths had to trade their silverwork for cattle from the Navajo. The Zuni admired the silver jewelry made by the Navajos, Native Americans were also influenced by the introduction of paintings made with oil and watercolor on canvas, where they traditionally painted objects such as hides or inside buildings, such as on the walls of a
kiva. The Native American paintings provided artwork that was realistic of the Native American lifestyle in contrast to the work of
Anglo-Americans romantic depictions. Traditional design elements were formalized at the Studio at the
Santa Fe Indian School, defining flatstyle
Native American art. Following
World War I, the completion of the
Santa Fe Railroad enabled American settlers to travel across the west, as far as the
California coast. New artists’ colonies started growing up around
Santa Fe and
Taos, the artists' primary subject matter being the native people and landscapes of the Southwest. Images of the Southwest became a popular form of advertising, used most significantly by the Santa Fe Railroad to entice settlers to come west and enjoy the “unsullied landscapes”.
Walter Ufer,
Bert Geer Phillips,
E. Irving Couse,
William Henry Jackson,
Tom Lea, and
Georgia O'Keeffe are some of the more prolific artists of the Southwest. ==Basketry==