Daniel "Sunshine" Reeves. Twin Lakes, New Mexico. Diné. Ten to twenty stamps on a single cuff — every one a separate blow.
Pick up a Sunshine Reeves cuff and the first thing you register is the density of it. Where many stampers place a handful of marks, Reeves may work ten to twenty different handmade stamps into a single piece — each one a distinct die, each strike a separate hammer blow placed by eye. It starts, always, as a flat sheet of sterling: no casting, no shortcuts. He hand-stamps it, forms it, saws the channels around every stone by hand. "Most people have no idea," he's said, "how complex the process is to create these unique art forms." He is, by wide agreement, one of the living masters of traditional Navajo stampwork.
The nickname came early — family gave him "Sunshine" as a boy for his light-colored hair. He was born in Twin Lakes, New Mexico, in 1966, into a family of accomplished silversmiths, and learned the craft at twenty-four from his older brothers, Gary Reeves and David Reeves, both respected artists in their own right. He's been at the bench as a professional since the late 1980s, and his range runs far past jewelry — bracelets and belt buckles, yes, but also silver boxes, knives, bowls, candle holders, even kerosene lanterns, all raised and stamped from flat silver.
Reeves's signature is that stamp density, worked around stone. His recurring marks read like weather and sky — lightning-and-rain patterns, stars, shooting stars — framed with what the trade calls "flanks," the side-stamping that borders a center stone, and finished with fine hand-sawn bezels and applied silver overlay. He favors high-grade turquoise, Kingman and Royston among his stones, set so the stampwork carries the eye around the piece. The whole effect is unmistakably his; collectors know it on sight, and his following reaches well past the Southwest — into Japan, Korea, and Europe.
He signs his work "SUNSHINE REEVES" — the full name struck into the silver.
Reeves took Best of Show at Santa Fe Indian Market in 1997 and Best in Class the following year, along with a Best of Show at the Gallup Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial — the top honors of the Native-art calendar. His work has been shown at the Heard Museum and the Peabody Museum at Harvard. In the trade he's earned a plain and telling nickname: a king of turquoise stampwork.
See his work in motion: T.Skies walked through a full Sunshine Reeves Kingman water-web set — the fine hand-sawn bezels, the lightning-and-rain stamping, the flanks — on a Friday Statement Jewelry show.
Know more about Sunshine? Contact T.Skies.