1905–1959, Zuni Pueblo. The stone-cutter whose work was fine enough to survive without a signature.
Under the old Zuni trade system, Leo Poblano didn't make finished jewelry. He cut the stone — and someone else set it in silver. The trader C.G. Wallace ran his shop that way: Poblano shaped and finished the mosaic, then handed it off to a separate silversmith to mount into a ring, a brooch, a bola, a box top. So a lot of Poblano's work carries no signature at all — the mounting smith, not the stone-cutter, held the stamp, and often didn't use it either. And yet his name outlived the anonymity, because the stonework was that good. He was among the first Zuni artists to carve relief into inlay — to give flat mosaic dimensional depth — and the difference was unmistakable.
Little is documented about his early life; even the galleries that handle his work say so plainly. What's known is that he cut stone for Wallace, enlisted during World War II, and came home to work as a BIA wildland firefighter while he kept making jewelry. The turn in his craft came through his wife, Daisy Hooee Nampeyo — a Zuni-Hopi artist trained at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris — who is credited with teaching him the relief-carving technique that gave his inlay its sculpted surface. His last wife, Ida Vacit, worked stone alongside him too. In 1959 the firefighting took his life, in an accident whose exact circumstances the sources tell differently — a fire that killed him in the line of that service.
Poblano's medium was stone mosaic — turquoise and shell cut, shaped, and finished by his own hand — but what set him apart was relief: instead of laying stone flat and flush, he carved dimension into it, so a Zuni figure or design stood up off the surface. That sculptural quality, rare in the mosaic of his day, is why he's remembered as one of the most imaginative Zuni stoneworkers of the twentieth century. (No personal maker's-mark is documented for him — a consequence of the cut-the-stone, mount-it-elsewhere trade system he worked in. His stonework is attributed by style and provenance, not a stamp. His daughter Veronica, by contrast, signs her pieces "VERONICA" — the son's-name-survives becoming, a generation on, a name in the metal.)
Leo Poblano's jewelry is held in the collections of the Heard Museum and the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, among others, and both major galleries that document him call him one of the most renowned Zuni stoneworkers of his century. The line runs forward through his daughter, Veronica Poblano, an award-winning Zuni jeweler in her own right — the family's stone tradition carried into a signed, contemporary hand.
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