Cuttlefish Cast Sterling Silver & Green Turquoise Bracelet Santo Domingo Artist Althea Cajero

$885.00

Cuttlefish Cast Sterling Silver & Green Turquoise Bracelet Santo Domingo Artist Althea Cajero

This cuttlefish cast bracelet made by Althea Cajero uses texture and color to create a beautifully unique design. The darkened silver contrasts nicely with the polished silver. The patterns in the sterling silver are elegantly eclectic. The stair-step design of the bracelet band is one of Althea Cajero’s signature flairs.

The highly collectible green turquoise from the Grasshopper mine in southern Nevada has a beautiful shape and exceptional shades of green due to the mine’s zinc-rich properties. Located near Tonopah, the Grasshopper mine has not been mined for turquoise for well over thirty years. The limited seven-year production of turquoise from here, paired with Althea Cajero’s limitless artistic talents, has created a distinctly rare cuttlefish cast bracelet that will enhance any Native American jewelry collection.

6″ inside circumference, including 1″ opening (at its narrowest point).

View more gorgeous Native American jewelry by artist Althea Cajero.    

In stock

Althea Cajero Green Turquoise Cuttlefish Cast Bracelet

Althea Cajero

See Althea Cajero’s work here.

Althea Cajero designs and makes elegant jewelry which can be worn as every day pieces as well as for special occasions. In 2013, Althea Cajero and her husband Joe Cajero were named Living Treasures by the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, a great honor for any artist, but especially poignant for a husband and wife.

Althea Tortalita-Cajero is from the Pueblos of Santo Domingo and Acoma, in New Mexico.  She was raised in Santo Domingo Pueblo and graduated from St. Catherine’s High School in Santa Fe, NM.  Her mother, Dorothy Tortalita, a silversmith, and her father Tony Tortalita, a lapidary jeweler, encouraged her and her brothers to learn the art saying, “You never know when you’ll need this to fall back on”.

Cajero worked for the Indian Health Service for 19 years in administrative capacities. She married Joe Cajero, Jr., bronze and clay sculptor from Jemez Pueblo, and spending time with him “opened her soul to her own creativity”.  In 2004, she started taking jewelry classes at the Poeh Arts Cultural Center in Pojoaque Pueblo, New Mexico, which she attended until 2006.

At the Cultural Center, she studied with Navajo jeweler Fritz Casuse. She was so intrigued by the beautiful texture of cuttlefish bone castings that she now creates a majority of her jewelry designs using the cuttlefish bone castings with hand fabrication.  She uses sterling silver, 14K gold, 18K gold, with which she integrates natural materials, including turquoise, coral, pearls, jaspers, and agates.

In 2005, with the encouragement of her husband, Cajero resigned from the Indian Health Service became a full-time artist.  She continues to improve her skills as a jeweler through continued education, learning from and listening to other artists, and listening to her intuition.

Cajero has been juried into the annual Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair and Market in Phoenix and the annual Santa Fe Indian Market in August.

Weight 2 lbs
Dimensions 10 × 8 × 3 in
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