b. 1949, Navajo. The root of the Reeves silversmithing line.
Every family of silversmiths has a first hand — the one who learned it, then taught the rest. For the Reeves family, that was David. Born in 1949, the oldest of the brothers, he taught the craft to Gary Reeves, to his half-brothers Andy, Darrell, and Donovan Cadman, and to the youngest, Daniel "Sunshine" Reeves — now one of the most collected Navajo stampers working. David's own record is thin, and there's an honest reason for it: he spent himself teaching rather than chasing the spotlight. His legacy isn't a list of ribbons. It's in his brothers' hands.
David worked what the family came to be known for — a Navajo Revival style: complex engraved and hand-stamped geometric designs that reach back to early-twentieth-century Navajo aesthetics and rework them. He set Damale and Royston turquoise, coral, and spiny oyster into sterling — concho buckles, storyteller-motif overlay cuffs, heavy turquoise bracelets. Dealers who handle his surviving vintage pieces call the work legendary; that's marketing language, but the pieces do carry a following in the resale trade on their own merit.
David signed his work, and his hallmark is documented on gallery record, though his output is far less catalogued than his younger brothers' — a maker better known, in the end, as a teacher than as a self-promoted name. He has passed away. What survives is the line he started: the Reeves family's place in contemporary Navajo silver runs directly back to him.
(We're candid about the gaps here: no birthplace narrative, no award history, and no firm death date is publicly documented for David — the record simply stays quiet on a man who kept out of the spotlight. We'd rather say that than invent a fuller story.)
Know more about David? Contact T.Skies.