Hope everyone is staying safe and healthy during these challenging times. With having more time on our hands, we are able to post more items. So, check out all of our new posts of Native American baskets and Navajo rugs for sale! Also, the rugs in this stack will be posted in the coming days with details and prices so stay tuned!
Also, had a great time last month in Marin at the 2020 American Indian Art Show. This was the first year that it was in the Fort Mason area in San Francisco instead of in San Rafael. This was a great area!
Not sure when the next show will be with all that is going on in the world, but looking forward to being able to get out there again!
Note: This is a very brief synopsis of the history of Navajo Weavings. A comprehensive history could be four hundred plus pages.
Also, note that historically, the Navajo women did the
weavings with some rare exceptions. With the Navajo being a matriarchal society, the women did much of the farming for corn, beans and squash. The Navajo (primarily the Navajo women) were sought after as slaves by some of the Southwest tribes, Mexicans, and Americans. So the content below is referring mostly to the Navajo women.
Navajo legends say that the Navajo people first learned to weave from “Spider Woman”. However, based on evidence, the Navajo were very likely weaving when
they arrived In the Southwest just a few hundred years before the Spanish conquistadors who brought the sheep to the new world. They may have used cotton and/or mountain sheep wool. Wool was first used to weave
in the 1600s. This happened as a result of the Spanish coming to
American shores to conquer the Pueblos and to look for gold. During this time the
Pueblos went into hiding co-existing with the Navajos and it is believed that
during this time the Navajos adopted some of the Pueblo ways of weaving.
The end of the 1700s brought huge changes to the Navajo weavings as they had
moved away from the Pueblo influence and had taken control of their own style.
By this time, the quality of Navajo weavings was considered to be superior and
the weavings were very valuable with vivid colors and being woven very tightly.
By the mid-1800s, the Navajos had returned to their original area (mesas and canyons) and began to depend more on the sale of weavings.
The railroad in the late 1800s made it easier for the Navajos to do commerce. Around the same time trading posts were opened on the Navajo reservations and floor rugs became more popular among the general population.
During the early 1900s Navajo Weavings became more of what we are used to seeing today with regional styles developing later.