Mudroom - Southwestern Entry
Inspiration for a mid-sized southwestern ceramic tile entryway remodel with yellow walls and a dark wood front door
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Mudroom - Southwestern Entry
Inspiration for a mid-sized southwestern ceramic tile entryway remodel with yellow walls and a dark wood front door
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The Navajo Arts and Crafts Guild buying rugs in Window Rock, Arizona, on March 27, 1943.
John and Agnez Anderson selling; Marie Martin buying.
Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
Series: Photographs of Navajo Life in the Southwestern Region of the United States
File Unit: Arts and Crafts
Image description: Six people in a room with large shelves along one side. One woman is holding one end of an unfurled woven rug, which has straight horizontal stripes and stepped diagonal stripes in several different colors (well, different shades of gray in this black and white photo). A man in a cowboy hat stands to the side near the shelves, which hold folded rugs. Three adults stand on the other side of the room, looking at the rug; one woman is holding a small child.
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Navajo art is one of North America's most popular forms of native American art. It has been made for centuries and is still being made today. If you are also a Navajo tribe arts and crafts lover, you probably wonder what unique crafts you can buy from a Native American store. We have made this simple for you. This image shows various native crafts like Navajo-style rugs, Pendleton Navajo blankets, and other crafts you can buy. Grab the detailed information here:
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Great Room Albuquerque
Remodeling ideas for a large, open-concept kitchen with a single-bowl sink, flat-panel cabinets, black cabinets, quartz countertops, a beige backsplash, a porcelain backsplash, paneled appliances, an island, and beige countertops in the Southwest style.
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Craftsman Home Office Cleveland
Example of a mid-sized arts and crafts carpeted craft room design with yellow walls and no fireplace
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Living Room - Open
Example of a large open concept mountain style living room with a medium tone wood floor and brown walls without a television and with a traditional fireplace, a stone fireplace, and beige walls.
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Craftsman Home Office Cleveland
Example of a mid-sized arts and crafts carpeted craft room design with yellow walls and no fireplace
0 notes
Great Room Albuquerque
Remodeling ideas for a large, open-concept kitchen with a single-bowl sink, flat-panel cabinets, black cabinets, quartz countertops, a beige backsplash, a porcelain backsplash, paneled appliances, an island, and beige countertops in the Southwest style.
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Narciso "Ciso" Platero Abeyta, or Ha So Deh (1918–1998) was a Navajo painter, silversmith and Navajo code talker. He is known for his colorful paintings depicting Navajo life. His work is in the permanent collection of museums including the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian.
Abeyta was born in 1918. He is named after his father, Narciso. His mother was Pablita. He started drawing when he was eleven. He attended the Santa Fe Indian School, starting in 1939. Dorothy Dunn was his teacher. Abeyta was a Golden Gloves boxer. He served in World War II in the United States Army, as a code talker. After he returned from service, he was unable to work for ten years due to his experiences at war. Eventually, he attended the University of New Mexico. He trained under Raymond Jonson.
Abeyta was primarily a painter. His paintings document Navajo life, and use brush stroke techniques that are reminiscent of Navajo rugs. He had two known commissions for work as a muralist; a 1934 mural for a social science classroom in Santa Fe, New Mexico and in 1939 for Maisel's Indian Trading Post in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He demonstrated painting at the 1939 San Francisco World's Fair.
Abeyta married Sylvia Ann, a Quaker ceramics artist. They had seven children, including artists Tony Abeyta and Pablita Abeyta. The family lived in Gallup, New Mexico.
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