Since 1957, Toh-Atin Gallery of Durango, Colorado, has been recognized as a quality dealer in Native American and Southwest art. Having begun as traders in Navajo rugs, the family business, owned and operated by Jackson Clark, has a nationwide reputation as one of the finest gallery operations in the country.
Please use our site, not only as a place to purchase art, but as an educational tool to learn more about the artists and the truly amazing art of the Southwest and the Native American people who live here.
We hope you will have an informative, exciting and enjoyable experience.
NEED HELP? Call to speak to a personal shopper. We’ll take care of you.
Do you have Navajo weavings, Indian jewelry, Pueblo pottery or Hopi Kachina dolls that are a little worse for wear and need restoration and repair? Too often, valuable pieces are discarded when they could be restored to their original beauty for a fraction of their value. Contact us and we can arrange these services for you!
Please call for additional information: 1-800-525-0384
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GIFTS UNDER $ 100.00
Gifts Under $100 In our gallery and on our web site we have more jewelry, fetishes, paintings, baskets, pottery and other beautiful Native American handmade art priced under $100 and $200. We even have lovely pieces under $50! It is so easy to shop on our site by Item, Artist, Tribe or Price Range, or any number of other ways. You can ask one of our courteous and knowledgeable sales representatives to search for the perfect gift for someone special, and it doesn't have to cost an arm and a leg for us to be happy to do so.
Recent articles
Navajo Weaving, A History
By H. Jackson Clark
Many Americans have heard about and even own Navajo rugs. They were those quaint objects that grandma and grandpa brought home from the Southwest generations ago. Usually, they were poorly regarded and roughly used and never respected as anything but rugs. Sure, everyone knew they wore well – in fact some outwear more traditional floor coverings. Almost everyone with a horse had a saddle blanket, but they were just Navajo rugs. Who cared? The romance had been lost in the shuffle. People used them, stored them, wore them out or just discarded them. So what’s the hoopla about now? Why was a Navajo blanket sold at auction by Sotheby in New York for more than $100,000 in 1983?*
For Prints and Posters . . . the Toh-Atin Publishing Company
Toh-Atin Publishing is one of the nation's leading publishers of limited edition prints and posters by the country's finest Native American, Western, Southwestern and wildlife artists.





