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Mac Grimmer, a Santa Fe dealer who has helped assemble many antique Indian art collections, said there have been crackdowns in the past and the market eventually settles down. But this could be different, he said. While prehistoric artifacts are only a small percentage of the Indian art market, Grimmer said the perception that buying Indian artifacts in general could lead to jail time or a visit from federal agents has had a chilling effect. "The part that nobody seems to understand is that there is a bigger contemporary Indian art market. If you continue to beat down on
'Indian art,' it's going to slop over onto that contemporary art and destroy this very lucrative and very large market that the American Indian population has built up," he said. Grimmer and the other dealers said they go to great lengths to ensure that the artifacts they buy and sell have a legitimate history, including details on when and from where they were collected. For Knox, many pots in his collections were acquired from museums or digs on private land. One of Knox's clients has spent more than $1 million buying pottery for the purpose of donating it to museums to build Indian collections. He said despite the picture painted of the trade by federal investigators, he and his fellow dealers are not camouflage-wearing felons who loot sites under the cover of darkness. "We're the ones who love this stuff, who clean it and care for it," he said. "That's what people are doing, preserving history. And there's a right way and a wrong way to do it."
Hammond added that there's no reason to consider a shady deal or illegal activity when there are so many legitimate Indian artifacts on the market. "If you really want to do this and not look over your shoulder and always have to watch your back and worry about things, you just need to stay on the right side," he said. ___ On the Net: Whitehawk Antique Shows: Antique Tribal Art Dealers Association:
http://whitehawkshows.com/
http://www.atada.org/
[Associated
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