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A superb vintage Navajo silver belt

buckle by Jack Adakai, c.1950’s-60’s



JACK ADAKAI (Active 1950’s-1980) was a brilliant Navajo silversmith who lived the quiet, rural life of a traditional Navajo way out on the Navajo reservation at the far edge of western New Mexico in the era before the worldwide web, before smartphones and texting, before Facebook, Google, Instagram and Twitter, before the rise of “superstar” Indian Artists becoming social media and cultural sensations. Were Jack Adakai alive and working today, making pieces like this distinctive buckle, he might well be one of these sensations himself based on his exceptional artistic and technical abilities.


Adakai worked at various times for the various prominent trading companies in Western New Mexico; C.G. Wallace,

Tobe Turpen, M.L. Woodard and he also worked with the Foutz trading family of Farmington and Shiprock, NM. Adakai’s work

is characterized by its generally larger scale and its excellent mastery of all traditional Navajo silversmithing techniques, such as tufa-casting, fabrication, stamp, chisel, repoussee and file work. In addition to his own formidable silversmithing abilities, Adakai was also an excellent teacher and mentor in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s to his young clan nephew,

the now highly-renowned Navajo silversmith, McKee Platero (b.1957), who is himself today an international internet

sensation and social media superstar made so by his legion of adoring fans, particularly in Japan.


At left and right, silver buckles by Jack Adakai. At center, a silver buckle by Adakai's nephew and former apprecntice, McKee Platero, c. 1990’s.

To view our website listing of the Jack Adakai buckle at right, please click here.

One can certainly see the very strong influence that Master silversmith Jack Adakai had on his brilliant young student in

the design and execution of this outstanding buckle and the “family” resemblance both stylistically and technically in both men’s work is quite remarkable, in our view. The deeply-contoured repoussee work, beautifully controlled and deeply-applied sophisticated and extremely complex stamp work and chiseled designs all work together marvelously and harmoniously. The overall effect here is like an ultra-sophisticated, highly-detailed miniature three-dimensional Modernist painting in silver.


The buckle measures a very nice-sized 3” in width by 2 5/8” in height. It weighs a satisfying 64 grams or 2 1/4 ounces.

The buckle will accept a belt strap of up to 1 3/4” in width. The buckle is in excellent original condition with a fair amount of age-appropriate wear from use and it is properly signed “J.A." in Jack Adakai’s customary capital letters signature on the back.


This buckle is an outstanding and extremely wearable piece of work by an supremely accomplished artist who is not as

widely famous an artist as he deserves to be, but who is nonetheless held in extremely high esteem by those who understand and value the finest in traditional Navajo silver work. The just-right size of this buckle guarantees that it would look just

as wonderful and wear just as well on either a man or a woman as seen below.


Please note that the leather belt shown here is for photographic purposes only and is not included

in the sale of the buckle. If desired, we can recommend an excellent leather belt maker in Santa Fe.



Price $1,900



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