Enjoy this video courtesy Visit Arizona of Rachel Sahmie demonstrating the art of traditional Hopi pottery.
Author: alexjuan23
Interconnected

Read Steve’s new article in Native American Art Magazine: “Interconnected”– A comprehensive look into how Nampeyo’s Sikyatki Revival inspired the careers of Maria and Julian Martinez.
View or download the article here.
In The Press: The Red and The Black Reviewed in Santa Fean Magazine
Read this review of our pottery exhibition “The Red and The Black: A Century of Santa Clara Pottery” in the Santa Fean Magazine. The piece originally ran in the August 2017 issue and includes a photograph by Elmore Indian Art.
View or download the article here.
Listen: In Search of Nampeyo Interview on KSFR

Listen to Steve Elmore’s full-length interview with KSFR’s Mary-Charlotte Domandi. They discussed Steve’s award-winning art history book In Search of Nampeyo. Thanks for the great interview!
In The Press: Walking The Line Reviewed In The Indian Trader Magazine

Our new show of oil paintings “Walking the Line: Contemporary Landscapes by Steve Elmore” opens Friday, June 16th, 2017. Check out the review in Indian Trader Magazine!
In The Press: Walking The Line Reviewed In Santa Fean Magazine

Our new show of oil paintings “Walking the Line: Contemporary Landscapes by Steve Elmore” opens Friday, June 16th, 2017. Check out the review in Santa Fean Magazine!
In Search of Nampeyo: Finalist in USA Best Book Awards

In addition to the IPPY Silver Medal for Non-Fiction in the Mountain West, “In Search Of Nampeyo: The Early Years 1875-1892” recently received recognition by the USA Best Book Awards as a finalist in two categories: Best Art Book and Best Interior Design. We are pleased with this acknowledgment by the publishing industry. For the award in design we would like to acknowledge the hard work of our designer Mark Diederichsen whose impeccable visual sense really brings Nampeyo’s work to life. Thanks very much to USA Book News for recognition in these categories.
As Reviewed in High Country News

February 2015
Nampeyo was the one of the first Native American artists to be recognized and honored by Euro-Americans. The elegant abstractions of this traditional Hopi potter brought her fame and launched an art movement in the late 19th century. But she rarely signed her work, and much of it was later lost. In his book, In Search of Nampeyo, Steve Elmore, a New Mexico-based artist and gallery owner, tracks what he believes is her work through museum storage rooms, private collections and even old, mail-order catalogues, where her pieces may have sold for as little as 50 cents.
What Elmore uncovers suggest an inventive potter, who may have created over 10,000 pieces and who patiently reworked intricate ideas until she was satisfied. Elmore reintroduces us to a distinctive artist whose work deserves rediscovery and celebration.
Video: A Visit To Nampeyo’s Home With Rachel Sahmie
Watch this mini-documentary about Steve’s journey to Nampeyo’s home at Sandhill Ranch with her great-great-granddaughter Rachel Sahmie. We explored the house and several old firing sites where Rachel made an unexpected discovery revealing that Nampeyo had in fact fired her pottery there. It was a piquant moment that we were fortunate to catch on camera.
We are happy to report that the video has been viewed hundreds of times so far, so we know many of you have seen it already. We would love your feedback. Please let us know what you think.

