Woshdéé! Welcome!

Our family has been trading with the native people of the Four Corners area for five generations. We are noted for our encouragement of innovation and quality in Navajo textiles. Browse our gallery for the finest in rugs, Navajo and Zuni jewelry, Navajo and Apache basketry and other items. We carry a full line of yarns spun specifically for Navajo style weaving and other supplies for weaving in the Navajo way. Please consult our auction and show schedule to see when R.B. Burnham and Co. may be coming to a location near you or in a place where you would like to be. Let us show you the excitement of Native American art at the dawn of a new century.

The slide show at the left introduces some of the featured items from our rug and jewelry galleries. Occasionally, there may even be a picture or two that shows up that will have a link to an interesting story, so check back once in a while and see what we have changed and added. We have a busy auction and show schedule lined up as you'll see and our trading post is an interesting place to stop if you happen to be on I-40 or U.S. 191 in Sanders, Arizona. We're always glad to say yá’át’ééh (hello) to visitors and show off our gallery, wool room and ice cream counter.

If you'd like to know when we've updated the site or get a news bulletin from us when something exciting happens, please sign up below. We won't inundate you with mail and we never, ever sell our mailing list. If you're on Facebook, you can "like" us or share selected content with your friends and spread the word about some of the finest work available in Native American crafts.


Look below for news about our current and past auctions, shows and items of interest

Rug auction long running outlet for Navajo weavers: from the The Daily Courier and Auction Central News


--March 29th, 2013--
2013_0327_TwoGreyHills_lead

This is a Two Grey Hills dating back to the 1950s, and may have been made by the Mailboy family of the Two Grey Hills area. It measures 56 by 94 inches. The asking price was $3,125.
RB Burnham Trading Post image.
Please click for a larger view.

This article appears with the permission of  the Associated Press:

WRITTEN BY PATRICK WHITEHURST, THE DAILY COURIER

Originally published: WEDNESDAY, 27 MARCH 2013 14:21

PRESCOTT, Ariz. (AP) – Navajo rugs can start at $25 a pop, while others can shoot up into thousands of dollars at the drop of a hat, or the raising of a hand.

Such is the climate at the Indian Art and Navajo Rug Auction, held annually at Prescott’s historic Smoki Museum. Crowds filled the interior of the historic locale for the 2013 event, which marked its 16th year in Prescott. Auctions took place March 15 and 16, following previews that featured hundreds of examples of contemporary and historic Indian art including pottery, baskets, jewelry, Kachinas and other items. On March 16, 300 Navajo weavings were also put on the auction block for buyers to bid on.

Guards were also on hand to protect the merchandise.

Navajo Trader and auctioneer Bruce Burnham is the fourth generation of a family in the trading business.

“I come by it honestly. We’ve been in the trading business since about 1886,” he said. “My daughter is the next generation and her daughter is the sixth generation in our operation, so it’s a family deal.”

The role of a trader, he explained, is to take care of the community itself.

“That’s what got us involved in rug auctions,” Burnham said. “Growing up, I heard my grandfather tell people that if you want a Navajo rug, now is a good time to buy it, because it’s a dying art. It’s not a dying art. There has never been a time you couldn’t open the back of a store and haul out more rugs than you can sell.”

Burnham, along with his partner Hank Blair, considers trading his way to give back to the Navajo community. Burnham himself lives on the Navajo reservation, but travels frequently to sell rugs throughout the United States. Throughout the course of a year, he’ll travel to Los Angeles and as far as Indianapolis to auction rugs.

“We sell over $1 million in rugs every year at auction. Most of which are rugs directly from the weavers,” Burnham said. “We do about 18 auctions a year.”

Funds from each sale go back to the weavers on the Navajo Reservation, he added. Typically, crafters from the Navajo reservation will line up outside his door to receive their earnings the day after an auction, he said.

The nonprofit Smoki Museum’s mission, according to Executive Director Cindy Gresser, is to instill understanding and respect for the indigenous cultures of the Southwest. Funds raised from the auction help the museum operate.

“It’s our major fundraiser. We seek funding from a variety of sources, but this is a major driver for us economically. We put a lot of effort into it and it’s become one of those auctions that’s very well known in the Southwest,” Gresser said.

The auction itself can often go quickly, she said.

“It depends on what the market is, what people are looking for and what they’re buying these days, but generally speaking we sell a very high percentage of our rugs at auction, 50 percent or better,” Gresser said. “We consign a lot of the merchandise through Ogg’s on Cortez. He’s a fixture here in town, probably the best known Indian art expert in this area.”

Merchandise, she said, can range from relatively inexpensive to very costly.

“Here you can get a small Navajo rug, that maybe isn’t in the best condition, but can be restored to something beautiful, up to something worth, literally, tens of thousands of dollars,” Gresser said.

Smoki Museum Docent Linda Young served as chairwoman for the recent rug auction. She has volunteered at the museum for nine years. While art at the auction hails from a number of tribes, rugs hail strictly from the Navajo reservation, she said.

The weekend auction was held in the historic Pueblo building, the original clubhouse for the Smoki people, built in 1931.

Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-03-22-13 0705GMT

This article appears with the permission of the Associated Press
Read more: http://www.auctioncentralnews.com/index.php/features/art-design/9465-rug-auction-long-running-outlet-for-navajo-weavers#ixzz2OyazEd8m

News Flash! Eiteljorg Museum Auction Start Time Moved to 10:30 on June 30


--June 27th, 2012--
Amy Begay

This rug by Amy Begay was at last week’s auction in Flagstaff. Who knows what great rugs you’ll find at the Eiteljorg auction?

We’ve just learned that the start time for the Eiteljorg Museum auction this Saturday, June 30, in Indianapolis has been moved to 10:30 AM, with the preview starting at 8:30.  That means that if you show up an hour later  at the time originally scheduled, we could be 80 items into the auction.  You could miss Bruce’s story about the bathroom window, you could miss the rug of a life time.  Let’s face it; you’d be disappointed and we don’t want that!

Again, the preview starts at 8:30 and the auction is at 10:30.  We’re sorry for the last minute schedule adjustment and we hope to see you at the Eiteljorg on Saturday!  Questions?  Please contact us.

A Great Day in Ganado: The 2012 Spring Friends of Hubbell Auction


--May 21st, 2012--
2012 Spring Friends of Hubbell Auction

An adorable model helps Hank Blair auction a small Ye'i weaving by Irene Etcitty. Please click on the picture to see it full size.

Thanks to all of the artists and bidders who made last Saturday a truly great day in Ganado. We saw lots of old friends and there were also many people attending the event for the first time. We’re still tabulating the the results, but we know that this auction once again provided welcome extra income to the artists after a long winter. Proceeds from the auction also help the Friends of Hubbell to provide scholarship money to Navajo college students and contribute to the maintenance of Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site.  You don’t even need to wait until next year for the next Friends of Hubbell auction!  The Summer Native American Arts auction will be held on September 15th.    Click here for more details.

We’ll leave you with a picture of Bruce relaxing post auction with some of the weavers who attended on Saturday.

Rose Yazzie, Jennie Slick, Bruce Burnham, Blake Ambrose, LaVera Blake

From left, Rose Yazzie, Jennie Slick, Bruce Burnham, Blake Ambrose and LaVera Blake after the auction.

More Pictures Added to Online Preview for March 3 Fine Arts Auction


--February 27th, 2012--
bt-auction-250 bt-auction-251 bt-auction-252
bt-auction-253 bt-auction-254 bt-auction-255 bt-auction-256
bt-auction-258-257 bt-auction-259 bt-auction-260 bt-auction-261

Click on any picture to see it in high resolution

We have more pictures to the online preview for the March 3rd  Fine Arts Auction.  You can click on any of the pictures above to see a closer view and you can click here to see the part of the catalog where these pieces appear.  Please contact us if you have any questions regarding these or any other items in the auction.


©2011 R.B. Burnham & Co.
R. B. Burnham and Co. Trading Post is a proud supporter of Adopt-A-Native Elder
Highway 191, Sanders, AZ
928-688-2777
Open 8 AM-6 PM Monday through Saturday, closed Sunday and holidays.
No part of our website content may be used without written permission.
Please contact us with feedback on our site Site design by Nizhoni Web Designs using WordPress