Robert Mac Eustace Jones. Zuni and Cochiti Pueblo. Third generation. He picked up the ball-peen hammer at ten, and never set it down.
Some smiths find their signature late. Robert Mac Eustace Jones found his at ten years old, with a ball-peen hammer, learning to move the surface of silver by hand — and that hammer texture is still the core of his work. He calls himself a metalsmith rather than a silversmith, and the distinction is honest: what he does is work the metal itself, its surface and movement, more than set a stone into it.
We don't have a documented hallmark for him on record, so we won't invent one. His work is best identified by its hammer-textured surfaces and by provenance — including a family line this directory already documents. (Hold a piece of his with a mark? That's exactly the first-hand detail we're built to capture.)
He is Zuni and Cochiti Pueblo, and he came up in a family of makers. He was taught by his mother, Linda Eustace, and by his grandparents, Ben and Felicita Eustace — both silversmiths this directory already covers, which places Robert in a documented three-generation line. He started making jewelry at ten. He has since gone on to study art history with a Native American concentration at the University of New Mexico, and shows in museum and fine-art markets — a maker thinking about the craft's history as well as making it.
The technique to know is ball-peen hammer texturing — the rounded hammer face driven into the metal to raise a worked, light-catching surface. He learned it at ten and it remains his core move; where other smiths reach first for a stone, Jones reaches for the surface of the metal itself, its texture and its movement. It's a metalsmith's instinct more than a lapidary's, and it's what makes his hand recognizable.
You can meet Robert in his own words, in our footage:
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