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5th
Semi-Annual Navajo Rug Auction At the Coconino Center
for the Arts
• Flagstaff, Arizona
Rug Auction: Saturday, November 6, 2–5 p.m.
Preview and Rug Appraisals: Saturday, November 6, 9
a.m.–1 p.m.

Photo by Michele Mountain © 2010
Museum of Northern Arizona
(Flagstaff, AZ)—Once again, the Flagstaff Cultural
Partners and the Museum of Northern Arizona will host
Flagstaff’s Semi-Annual Navajo Rug Auction. This event
will be held on Saturday, November 6 from 2 to 5 p.m. at
the Coconino Center for the Arts.

Photo by Michele Mountain ©
2010 Museum of Northern Arizona |
It will feature
more than 300 vintage and contemporary Navajo
weavings from artists, consigners, and the R. B.
Burnham & Co. Trading Post. Navajo rug styles to
be auctioned include Two Grey Hills, Ganado,
Teec Nos Pos, Ye’ii, Pictorial, Wide Ruins,
Storm, Sandpainting, and Eyedazzler. |
These semi-annual
auctions have become popular among individuals,
collectors, interior designers and Native arts
retailers. The excitement at the last auction was
tangible as rugs from the late 1800s to today were shown
around the room and bidders vied for their favorites.
And it was an excellent opportunity to learn more about
Navajo textiles, with the auctioneers adding their
expert observations and advice about each rug.
The auction will be led by auctioneers from the R. B.
Burnham & Co. Trading Post. Bruce Burnham and his family
are well known for their work in trading Native art from
the Four Corners Region for five generations. Bruce
Burnham has been a trader to the Navajo for over forty
years and is also the auctioneer for the Hubbell Trading
Post in Ganado, Arizona. He and his wife Virginia own
and operate the Burnham Trading Post and Collector’s
Gallery in Sanders, Arizona, in the Navajo new lands.
The Burnham family is known for their encouragement of
innovation and quality in Navajo textiles and Bruce
Burnham’s expertise in buying, selling, and trading has
earned him the respect of area collectors and peers
nationwide.
Rug consignments will be accepted Wednesday, November 3
through Friday, November 5 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
Coconino Center for the Arts. Navajo weavers, traders,
and individuals can bring rugs for possible selection by
the Burnhams for the auction. Handspun, hand-carded, and
vintage pieces verses acrylic yarns will be chosen, to
ensure quality items. Information on how to evaluate and
buy Navajo rugs will also be available from the
auctioneers during the preview hours Saturday, November
6, 9 a.m.–1 p.m.
Also on Saturday, November 6 from 9 a.m. –1 p.m.,
attendees will be able to bring Navajo textiles of their
own for evaluation and assessment, for $25 per piece.
Please note, the evaluation values given will be
approximate and are not suitable for insurance or tax
purposes.
Rug auctions are an excellent opportunity to learn about
Native fine art. Before the auction you can hold rugs
and appreciate them up close. Detailed information and
discussion about a specific piece, artist, and other
aspects of the weavings will be available before and
after the auction the auctioneers, experts in the field
of Navajo weaving and culture. Auctions allow weavers
and other artists to obtain an immediate and higher
return for their work and sometimes consigning artists
attend the auction. The breadth of artists, styles, and
bidding opportunities has made rug auctions an
affordable way to purchase and collect high quality
rugs, and in these economic times, Navajo rugs are a
good investment. Rugs can sell from twenty to several
thousand dollars. Even if you do not buy anything, the
auction is a fun and exciting experience and a great way
to learn.
Auction items can be purchased with Visa, MasterCard,
Discover, cash, and checks.
Frybread, Navajo tacos, and stew will be on sale on
Saturday from 11 a.m. on.
The Coconino Center for the Arts is located at 2300 N.
Fort Valley Road in Flagstaff, Arizona on Highway 180,
on the way to the Grand Canyon. Call the Coconino Center
for the Arts at 928/779-2300 or visit
culturalpartners.org for more information.
Established in 1999, Flagstaff Cultural Partners (FCP)
is a nonprofit 501 ©(3) organization that manages the
Coconino Center for the Arts. FCP provides opportunities
for management development to local art and cultural
organizations and develops programs and activities that
support artistic, cultural, and scientific endeavors for
the community and its visitors. Visit
culturalpartners.org for more information.
Now celebrating its 83rd year, the Museum of Northern
Arizona is one of the great regional museums of our
world, surrounded by tremendous geological, biological,
and cultural resources in one of Earth’s most
spectacular landscapes. With a long and illustrious
history, MNA evokes the very spirit of the Colorado
Plateau, including the Grand Canyon and Four Corners
regions. More information is available at musnaz.org.
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