


Jesse Walter Fewkes was the Smithsonian archaeologist whose 1890s excavations at Sikyatki, on First Mesa in Hopi country, brought to light the bold polychrome wares that would later inspire Nampeyo and the entire Hopi pottery revival. This Dover volume gathers his Bureau of American Ethnology plates, more than 250 illustrations of birds, clouds, lightning, and the geometric forms the ancient potters used, drawn directly from the vessels themselves.
Issued by Dover in 1973 as an unabridged republication of Fewkes's reports on Sikyatki and the Archeological Expedition to Arizona, the edition reprints in black and white plates that were color in the originals while preserving the full body of designs. The cover's golden Sikyatki jar, with its keyed and stepped motifs, signals exactly what is inside. It remains a working reference for anyone studying Hopi iconography, a clean and complete copy of the book that put these designs into wide circulation.
First Dover edition (1973)
The copyright page states 'This Dover edition, first published in 1973' — the first printing of the Dover republication of Fewkes's Bureau of American Ethnology studies. This is a Dover Publications book; see how Dover Publications states its first printings.
| Author | Jesse Walter Fewkes |
| Publisher | Dover Publications |
| Year | 1973 |
| ISBN | 0-486-22959-9 |
| Edition | First Dover edition (1973) |
| Condition | Dover paperback, edge wear. |
| Topic | Hopi pottery design |
Photographs © New Mexico Literacy Project, licensed CC BY 4.0 — reuse with attribution. This is an identification and provenance record of a real donation; no appraisal or valuation is offered.
Keep identifying
Have Southwestern or collectible books like these?
We give real books a second life. Free pickup anywhere in Albuquerque and across New Mexico, any condition — signed firsts, whole estates, a single box. Nothing collectible ends up in a landfill.
Schedule a free pickup → or use the 24/7 drop box