Face it, we all like dinosaurs. I remember being a little girl in the later 1950s and early 1960s running around lisping that I wanted to be a paleontologist and that the stegosaurus was my favorite animal. William Andrew Pacheco (Santo Domingo) understands this passion, and the dinosaurs roaming his monumental pottery pieces come from a shared love of these doomed creatures.
I know collectors who seek out dinosaur fetish carvings. (A hint: Turquoise Village in Zuni often has a small box of older dinosaur carvings among its wonderful trays of fetishes shelved by animal.)
Indian Country also abuts places where the richest dinosaur findings have been made. Contemporary dinosaur carvings can even show indications of feather tufts, the latest discovery in a far from stodgy field.
My husband has long wanted a dinosaur Navajo pictorial weaving of dinosaurs — a “Jurassic rug” as it were — but due to the work involved (the detail and non-repetitive patterns) these are quite rightly among the highest priced examples of the craft. So he’s been saving up… .