| . "Respected Artist of Native Imagery, Tales Dies at 91". Arizona Republic, September 6, 2011. 2011. | 2 | 2011 | Newspaper article | |
| . IAIA Rocks the 60s - The Painting Revolution at the Institute of American Indian Arts. Santa Fe: Institute of American Indian Arts Museum. 2001. | unpaginated | 2001 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Ahtone, Heather (editor) and Todd Stewart (photographer). Seeds of Being: a Project of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Native American Art & Museum Studies Seminar. Norman, Oklahoma: Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art. 2018. | 13 | 2018 | Includes color reproduction of John Hoover's 1996 mixed-media sculpture "Raven and the Sun" with commentary by Kerrie Monahan. | Published in conjunction with the exhibition "Seeds of Being: a Project of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Native American Art & Museum Studies Seminar" at the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, Norman, Oklahoma, June 8, 2018-December 30, 2018. Seminar instructors: heather ahtone and W. Jackson Rushing III; commentary on featured artworks by Seminar students enrolled in the University of Oklahoma School of Visual Arts. | |
| American Indian Artists Exhibition (32nd : 1977 : Tulsa, Oklahoma). 32nd Annual American Indian Artists Exhibition, Philbrook Art Center, May 8 through July 3, 1977. Tulsa, Oklahoma: Philbrook Art Center. 1977. | catalog is not paginated | 1977 | Catalog of a juried exhibition held May 8, 1977-July 3, 1977, at the Philbrook Art Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Curator of American Indian art, Bentley Stone; jurors, Robert Annesley, F. Blackbear Bosin, and Carol Soatikee. | |
| Anthony, Kathryn. "Standing Tall". Focus/Santa Fe, August-September 1989. Focus/Santa Fe. 1989. | 22-25 | 1989 | | |
| Archuleta, Margaret (curator) and Martin Sullivan (essayist). Twentieth Century American Sculpture at the White House: Exhibition VI. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 1997. | not paginated | 1997 | Catalog of an exhibition curated by Margaret Archuleta and organized by the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona. Introduction by Hillary Rodham Clinton; photography by David Finn. Artists include R.E. Bartow, Doug Coffin, Susie Bevins Ericsen, Bob Haozous, John Hoover, Allan Houser, Doug Hyde, Truman Lowe, George Morrison, Nora Naranjo-Morse, Willard Stone, and Roxanne Swentzell. | |
| Archuleta, Margaret and Rennard Strickland. "Shared Visions, Part 2". Native Peoples, vol. 5, fall 1991. 1991. | 16-17 | 1991 | | |
| Archuleta, Margaret and Rennard Strickland. Shared Visions: Native American Painters and Sculptors in the Twentieth Century. Phoenix: Heard Museum. 1991. | 60, 97 | 1991 | | |
| Bigfeather, Joanna O. "IAIA Rocks the 60's". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 27, no. 1 (winter 2001). 2001. | 54 | 2001 | | |
| Black, Lydia T. "Aleutian Art: a Cord of Many Strands". Exxon USA, 1983. 1983. | 17-21 | 1983 | | |
| Decker, Julie. "John Hoover: Carving Out a Life". In: Nottage, James H. (editor). Into the Fray: the Eiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art, 2005. Indianapolis, Indiana: Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art. 2005. | 26-57 | 2005 | | |
| Decker, Julie. John Hoover: Art & Life. Anchorage, Alaska: Anchorage Museum of History and Art. 2002. | | 2002 | Decker, Julie. John Hoover: Art and Life. Seattle, Wash.: Anchorage Museum of History and Art and the Anchorage Museum Association; University of Washington Press. 2002. | Catalog of an exhibition. Co-published with the Anchorage Museum Association in association with the University of Washington Press, Seattle, Washington. | |
| DiPerna, Alan. "In Memoriam: John Hoover, 1919-2011". Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market Official Guide, 2012. 2012. | 14-15 | 2012 | Includes full-page black and white portrait photograph. | |
| Empie, Sunnie. "Poetry in Wood: Creation Stories Come Alive Through the Art of Unangan Sculptor John Hoover". Native Peoples, May/June/July 1998. 1998. | 42-46 | 1998 | | |
| Fauntleroy, Gussie. "Native Sculpture Today". Native Peoples, vol. 16, no. 2 (January/February). 2003. | 26-31 | 2003 | Discusses Native sculptors Roxanne Swentzell, John Hoover, Larry Yazzie, and Anita Fields. | |
| Fauntleroy, Gussie. "Native Sculpture Today". Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market Official Guide, 2003. 2003. | 26-31 | 2003 | Discusses Native sculptors Roxanne Swentzell, John Hoover, Larry Yazzie, and Anita Fields. | |
| Gault, Ramona. "Monumental Sculpture". Indian Artist, vol. 3, no. 3 (summer 1997). 1997. | 45 | 1997 | | |
| Heard Museum. Heard Museum Grounds Self-Guided Sculpture Tour. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 2016. | | 2016 | Includes titles of sculptures and names of sculptors, with map. | |
| Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market (41st : 1999 : Phoenix, Ariz.). The 41st Annual Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 1999. | cover | 1999 | Photograph of John Hoover's outdoor bronze sculpture "Sea Weed People" reproduced on cover; sculpture is in the art collection of the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona. | Program; Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market held March 6-7, 1999. | |
| Heard Museum, Ernest Berke, and Harry Jackson. Sculpture I: the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona, February 10 to April 1, 1973. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 1973. | unpaginated | 1973 | Catalog of an exhibition with introduction by Director Patrick T. Houlihan and short essay by Trustee Rex A. Peterson. Participating artists include Duffy Wilson, Allan Houser, Michael Naranjo, Henry C. Lande, Douglas Hyde, Bob Haozous, John Hoover, Gordon Monroe, Charles Pratt, Fritz Scholder, Michael McCleve, Phillip Belone, Angeline Eagle, Innokenty Lestenkof, Jr., Francis Makil, Larry Golsh, and Bruce Wynne. | |
| Heard Museum, Patrick Neary (catalog designer), Al Abrams (photographer) and Camille Tumolo (copy editor). Invitational Sculpture, February 4-March 5, 1977. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 1977. | | 1977 | Catalog of an exhibition with the following artists: Bill Glass, Bob Haozous, John Hoover, Allan Houser, Tony Hunt, Doug Hyde, Henry Lande, Michael McCleve, George Morrison, Dan Namingha, Michael Naranjo, Fritz Scholder, Robert Shorty. Includes introduction by Patrick T. Houlihan. | |
| Highwater, Jamake. ~The Sweet Grass Lives on, Fifty Contemporary North American Indian Artists. New York, New York: Lippincott & Crowell Publishers. 1980. | 105-108 | 1980 | | |
| Katz, Jane B. (editor). This Song Remembers: Self-Portraits of Native Americans in the Arts. Boston, Massachusetts: Houghton Mifflin Company. 1980. | 32-37 | 1980 | Includes the following artists: Pitseolak, Eskimo graphic artist; Kenojuak, Eskimo graphic artist; Tony Hunt, Kwakiutl woodcarver; John Hoover, Aleut sculptor; Peter Jemison, Seneca painter; George Morrison, Ojibway/Chippewa painter and collagemaker; Amos Owen, Sioux/Dakotah pipecarver; Pearl Sunrise, Navajo weaver and basketmaker; Mary Morez, Navajo painter; R.C. Gorman, Navajo painter, sculptor, and lithographer; Allan Houser, Apache sculptor; Grace Medicine Flower, Tewa potter; Helen Hardin, Tewa painter; Louis Ballard, Quapaw/Cherokee composer; Cecilia White, Tlingit dancer; John Kauffman, Nez Perce actor and director; Gerald Vizenor, Ojibway/Chippewa writer; Jamake Highwater, Blackfeet writer; Simon Ortiz, Acoma poet; Leslie Silko, Laguna poet and novelist; and N. Scott Momaday, Kiowa poet and novelist. | |
| Lane, Bob. "Dept. of Interior Buys Art by Edmonds Couple". Seattle Times, March 31, 1967. 1967. | 52-53 | 1967 | Newspaper article | |
| Longfish, George. New Directions Northwest: Contemporary Native American Art. Olympia, Wash.: Evergreen State College. 1986. | 12, 15, 19, 30-31, 50 | 1986 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Marshall, Ann. "The Third Dimension: Sculptural Stories in Stone and Bronze". Earthsong, April - June 2016. 2016. | 10-11 | 2016 | Discusses the Heard Museum exhibit "The Third Dimension: Sculptural Stories in Stone and Bronze" which opened April 30, 2016. | |
| Marshall, Ann E. "Inviting Change: the Heard Museum Invitationals' Context for Cannon". In: Marshall, Ann E. and Diana F. Pardue (editors). Of God and Mortal Men: T.C. Cannon. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Museum of New Mexico Press in association with the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona. 2017. | 79-80 | 2017 | | |
| Matuz, Roger (editor). ~St. James Guide to Native North American Artists. Detroit, Michigan: St. James Press. 1997. | 232-234 | 1997 | | |
| McFadden, David Revere and Ellen Napiura Taubman. Changing Hands: Art without Reservation 2, Contemporary Native North American Art from the West, Northwest & Pacific. New York, New York: Museum of Arts & Design. 2005. | 42, 246 | 2005 | Catalog of a travelling exhibition; published in association with the American Craft Museum, New York, New York. Includes bibliographical references and index. | |
| Miller, Marlan. "New Show Has Best of Modern Indian Art". Phoenix Gazette, Saturday, September 14, 1974. 1974. | 4 | 1974 | Newspaper article on the Heard Museum exhibition with common title "National Endowment for the Arts" held September 1974-November 17, 1974. Artists cited include Solomon McCombs, Allen [that is, Allan] Houser, Larry Golsh, Reginald D. Cuch, John Hoover, Douglas Hyde, Franklin Fireshaker, Oscar Howe, Caroline Mass [that is, Caroline Maas], Wayne Eagleboy, George Morrison, Virginia Taylor, and Alfred Whiteman Jr. Appears in the "Marquee Art" section of the host newspaper. | |
| Monthan, Guy and Doris Monthan. "Daybreak Star Center". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 3, no. 3 (summer 1978). 1978. | 32-33 | 1978 | | |
| Monthan, Guy and Doris Monthan. "John Hoover". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 4, no. 1 (winter 1978). 1978. | 50-55 | 1978 | | |
| Montiel, Anya. "Outside the Walls: Indigenous Public Art". National Museum of the American Indian, fall 2016. 2016. | 27 | 2016 | | |
| Museum of Contemporary Native Arts. New Native Art Criticism: Manifestations. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Museum of Contemporary Native Arts. 2011. | 108-109 | 2011 | | |
| Nottage, James H. (editor). Into The Fray: the Eiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art, 2005. Indianapolis, Indiana: Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art. 2005. | | 2005 | Published in association with the University of Washington Press, Seattle, Washington. Includes Eiteljorg master artist John Hoover, and the five following Eiteljorg Fellows for Native American Fine Art: Harry Fonseca, James Lavadour, C. Maxx Stevens, Tanis Maria S'eiltin, and Marie Watt. | |
| Parker, James Varner (curator, exhibit designer) and Roger Buchanan (photographer). Sculpture II: the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona, December 14, 1974 to February 2, 1975. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 1974. | not paginated | 1974 | Cited as the artist of sculptures no. 96-98 under Classification V-Wood. | Catalog of an exhibition held December 14, 1974-February 2, 1975, Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona. Participating artists include Bob Haozous, Allan Houser, John R. Salter, Bud Boller (Lewis M., Jr.), Paul Willeto, Fritz Scholder, Willard Stone, Carol Frazier, Earl Biss, Gordon Monroe, Michael Naranjo, Earl Lister, Jr., Larry Golsh, Bruce Wynne, Michael McCleve, Henry Lande, Douglas Hyde, William T. Hatch, Jud Boardman, Sandy Pembleton, Duffy Wilson, Cam Wilson, Santiago Jim Tafoya, Gerald R. McMaster, Gordon Van Wert, Glen La Fontaine, Bill Glass, Dominick F. La Ducer, Judith A. La Ducer, Kevin Brown, Bob Maldonado, Otellie Loloma, Rose Kerstetter, Bruce Timeche, Mary Runningdeer Townsend, Richard Barrett, Alfred Aguilar, Reginald D. Cuch, John Hoover, Jake Thomas, Aaron Yava, Charles (Henry) Bushyhead, Marion S. Grimm, and Robert D. Shorty. | |
| Robinson, Andrea and Margaret Archuleta. "Honoring Native America: Finally, It's Called Art". Native Peoples, vol. 11, no. 4 (August, September, October 1998). 1998. | 37 | 1998 | | |
| Rupp, James M. Art in Seattle's Public Places: an Illustrated Guide. Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Press. 1992. | 217, 295 | 1992 | | |
| Scarp, Mark J. "Bank of America Supports Conservation of Key Heard Sculpture". Earthsong, April - June 2016. 2016. | 8-9 | 2016 | | |
| Shalkop, R. L. "Contemporary Alaskan Eskimo Art". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 4, no. 1 (winter 1978). 1978. | 43 | 1978 | Illustrated with artworks by the following KIvetoruk Moses, Alvin Amason, Dolly Spencer, Mary Black, Frederick Anderson, Lawrence Ahvakana, John Penetac, Isaac Koyuk, Earl Mayac, Ronald Senungetuk, Melvin Olanna, Albert Kulowiyi, Peter Seeganna, Joseph Senungetuk, John Kailukiak, Carl Hank, Rosalie Paniyak, Peter Luke Smith, Kay Hendrickson, George Ahgupuk, Milo Minock, and Bernard Katexac. | |
| Shalkop, R. L. Contemporary Native Art of Alaska from the Collection of the Anchorage Historical and Fine Arts Museum. Anchorage: Anchorage Historical and Fine Arts Museum. 1979. | 18 | 1979 | | |
| WalkingStick, Kay and Ann E. Marshall. So Fine! Masterworks of Fine Art from the Heard Museum. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 2001. | 13, 38-39 | 2001 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Wikipedia contributors. "John Hoover (Artist)". In: Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia (host URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/) at source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hoover_(artist). 2011 . | | 2011 | Current entry on John Hoover in Wikipedia (viewed January 8, 2019); webpage created September 7, 2011, and revised and updated irregularly. | View |
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