Authentication and Evaluation
of Art Objects
Other art objects
Dr. Mark Sublette, owner of Medicine Man Gallery in Tucson
and Santa Fe, has created a channel
of YouTube online videos on topics relating to Native American baskets,
weavings, pottery and carvings. Titles regarding authentication include:
For pottery:
- Historic
Acoma Pueblo Pottery Identification
- Historic
Zuni Pottery, collectors guide to zuni pottery, how to date and price Zuni
pottery
- How
To Identify Antique San Ildefonso Polychrome Pottery
- How
To Identify Early Hopi Pottery
- Maria
Martinez Black and Red Pottery
- Maria
Martinez and Popovi Gunmetal Pottery
- Maria
Martinez pottery types of coloration and rarity, not all Maria pottery
is black
- Nampeyo
pottery, the master of Hopi pottery
- Pueblo
and Maria Martinez Pottery what to look for in condition
For weavings:
- Characteristics
of Navajo Blankets
- Five
Factors To Value Navajo Rugs and Blankets
- How
to identify a Germantown Navajo Blanket
- How
to identify a Navajo Chiefs Blanket
- How
to identify Navajo Child's Blankets
- How
to Identify a Navajo Rug
- How
To Value Navajo Rugs and Blankets
- Navajo
Blanket Yarn Analysis and Identification
- Navajo
Rug vs Blanket
- Navajo
weavings: the Spirit Line
- Pricing
and Identification: Navajo Saddle Blankets
- Storm
Patterns Navajo rugs from the Crystal trading post
- Tips
on Navajo Classic Blankets
- Transitional
Versus Classic Navajo Blankets who to tell the difference
- Two
Grey Hills Navajo weavings: how to identify and their history
For carvings:
- How
To Identify Early Hopi and Zuni Kachina Dolls
For baskets:
- How
to handle and identify Apache baskets
- How
to Identify Pima Baskets vs Apache Baskets
- Pictorial
elements and price structure for Native American basketry
- Tips
on what to look for in Indian baskets
General:
- How
to identify fake antique Native American art
- Native
American art and polychrome coloration and how it effects value
Return to Authentication
and Evaluation of Art Objects
Note:
Links to sources of information outside of our website
are provided only as referrals for your further consideration. Please use
due diligence in judging the quality of information contained in these and
all other web sites. Information from linked sources may be inaccurate or
out of date. TFAO neither recommends or endorses these referenced organizations.
Although TFAO includes links to other websites, it takes no responsibility
for the content or information contained on those other sites, nor exerts
any editorial or other control over them. For more information on evaluating
Web pages see TFAO's General Resources
section in Online Resources for Collectors and Students of Art History.
Search
Resource Library
Copyright 2011 Traditional Fine Arts Organization, Inc., an Arizona nonprofit corporation. All rights
reserved.