| . "Annual Indian Painting Exhibition at Philbrook". August, 1957. Smoke Signals. | 8-9 | | | |
| . "Deer Hunt". v. 6, no. 12, August 1939. Washington, D.C.: OIA. | unknown | | | |
| . "Ha-So-De Paintings Featured at Navajo Tribal Museum". April 7, 1982. Window Rock, Ariz.: Navajo Times. | 2 | | Newspaper article | |
| . "Narciso Abeyta, Code Talker, Artist". Monday, June 29, 1998. Phoenix: The Arizona Republic. | B-3 | | Newspaper article | |
| . "Narciso Abeyta's Show Opens Today at Window Rock Museum". Gallup Independent, April 12, 1982. 1982. | page not available | 1982 | Newspaper article | |
| . "Narciso Platero Abeyta". May 25, 1979. Gallup N.M.: Gallup Independent. | unknown | | Newspaper article | |
| . "The Navajo Tribal Museum". v. 15, no. 12, March 21, 1974. Window Rock, Ariz.: The Navajo Times. | | | Newspaper article | |
| . Indianische Kunst im 20: Jahrhundert: Malerei, Keramik und Kachinafiguren Indianischer Kunstler in den USA. Munchen, Germany: Prestel-Verlag. 1985. | 58, 93, 200-201, 351 | 1985 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| . Seasons Turning: A Year of Native American History and Art. Petaluma, Calif.: Pomegranate Communications. 2009. | unpaginated | 2009 | 2009 Calendar | |
| . Translating Navajo Worlds: The Art of Narciso (Ha-So-De) and Tony Abeyta. Santa Fe: Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian. 1994. | unpaginated | 1994 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| . Who's Who in American Art, 1995-96. New Providence, N.J.: R. R. Bowker. 1995. | 516 | 1995 | | |
| American Indian Exposition. American Indian Exposition and Congress, October 21, 22, 23, 1937, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Tulsa, Oklahoma: American Indian Exposition. 1937. | 7 | 1937 | Catalog of an exhibition and congress organized by American Indian Exposition. Sources and artists represented: Shawnee Agency: Ernest Spybuck, Bennie Jefferson; Marcellus Duncan; Herman Franklin; Osage Agency: Louis Haskell, Marian Revard, Russell Wagoshe, Mary Tall Chief; Kiowa artists: James Auchiah, Stephen Mopope, Spencer Asa; Agency of the Five Civilized Tribes: Cecil Dick, Tony Tonkilla; Navajo Service, Window Rock, Arizona: Andrew Tsinaijginnie; United States Indian School, Santa Fe: Allan Busheyhead, Oscar Howe, Mary Ellen, Ha-so-de, Helena Lo-Mo-Yes-Va, Tony Chapito, Clarence Guiterrez, Louis Naranjo, Juan B. Gutierrez, Jose D. Pecos, Otelateya, Santiago Romero, Joe H. Herrera, Thomas Thompson, Ca-Wa-Stu-Ma, Juan G. Swazo, Pete Vigil, Ultimio Vigil, Ka-Tside, Carlos Garcia, Eva Mirabel, Tonita Lujan, Eloisa Bernal, Pop-Chalee, James Tsoodle, Lorenzo Beard; Bacone College, Bacone: Richard West, Solomon McComb, Alfred Kodaseet, Juan Martinez, Willard Stone, Acee Blue Eagle, Wo | |
| Archuleta, Margaret and Rennard Strickland. Shared Visions: Native American Painters and Sculptors in the Twentieth Century. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 1991. | 39, 78 | 1991 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Arrieta, Robert. "Missing Report Causes Confusion for Family of Narciso Abeyta". July, 1998. The Indian Trader. | 16 | | | |
| Berna-Heath, Diane. "Father and Son". Southwest Art, vol. 23, no. 10 (March 1994). 1994. | 26 | 1994 | | |
| Bernstein, Bruce. ~With a View to the Southwest: Dorothy Dunn and a Story of American Indian Painting. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Museum of Indian Arts and Culture/Laboratory of Anthropology. 1995. | 4 | 1995 | Catalog of an exhibition held March 19, 1995-August 18, 1996. | |
| Bernstein, Bruce and Jackson Rushing. ~Modern by Tradition: American Indian Painting in the Studio Style. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Museum of New Mexico Press. 1995. | 24, 68, 80, 148-150 | 1995 | | |
| Broder, Patricia Janis. American Indian Painting & Sculpture. New York, New York: Abbeville Press. 1981. | 74-75 | 1981 | Features artwork mostly from the collection of the Philbrook Art Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Includes bibliographical references and index. | |
| Broder, Patricia Janis (curator). ~Summer Rains/Winter Winds: Native American Paintings from a Private New Jersey Collection. Montclair, New Jersey: Montclair Art Museum. 1985. | 11 | 1985 | Catalog of an exhibition held September 22, 1985-November 10, 1985, Montclair Art Museum, New Jersey. | |
| Brody, J. J. Indian Painters and White Patrons. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 1971. | 150-152 | 1971 | | |
| Chase, Katherine. ~"Navajo Painting". Plateau, vol. 54, no. 1 (1982). 1982. | 10-11 | 1982 | Thematic issue of Plateau. Painters cited include Harrison Begay, Narcisso Abeyta, Quincy Tahoma, Gerald Nailor, Andy Tsinajinnie, Beatien Yazz, Robert Chee, James Wayne Yazzie, R.C. Gorman, David Chetlahe Paladin, Mary Morez, Clifford Beck, Justin Tso, Clifford Brycelea, Robert Draper, W.B. Franklin, Bahe Whitehorne, Sr., and Tony Begay. | |
| Dávila-Shivers, Ungelbah. "The Soul's Memory: the Wheelwright Museum Celebrates the Abeyta Family of Diné Artists, Who Interpret the Colorful Present by Connecting with a Turbulent Past". New Mexico Magazine, vol. 100, issue 2 (March 2022). 2022. | 64-69 | 2022 | Features Tony Abeyta, Narciso Abeyta, Pablita Abeyta, and Elizabeth Abeyta. | |
| Davis, Linzee W. King. "Modern Navajo Water Color Painting". Arizona Highways, vol. 32, no. 7 (July 1956). 1956. | 12, 24, 29 | 1956 | | |
| Dawdy, Doris Ostrander (compiler). ~Annotated Bibliography of American Indian Painting. New York, New York: Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. 1968. | 5, 8, 13, 16-17, 19, 22 | 1968 | Issued as vol. 21, part 2 in series, Contributions from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. | |
| Dunn, Dorothy. "The Development of Modern American Indian Painting in the Southwest and Plains Areas". El Palacio, vol. 58, no. 11 (November 1951). 1951. | 347 | 1951 | | |
| Dunn, Dorothy. ~American Indian Painting of the Southwest and Plains Areas. Albuquerque, New Mexico: University of New Mexico Press. 1968. | 280, 302-303, 319, 329, 349 | 1968 | Includes bibliographical references and index. | |
| Falk, Peter Hastings, ed. Who Was Who in American Art. New Providence, N.J.: Sound View Press. 1985. | 2 | 1985 | | |
| Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art and the Philbrook Museum Art. The Eugene B. Adkins Collection: Selected Works. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. 2011. | 105 | 2011 | Cited on page 265 of index as "Abeyta, Narciso". | Includes essays by B. Byron Price, Mark A. White, James Peck, W. Jackson Rushing III, Christina E. Burke, Mary Jo Watson, and Jane Ford Aebersold. Published in In cooperation with the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art and the Philbrook Museum Art. Includes bibliographical references and index. | |
| Ganteaume, Cécile R., Colin G. Calloway (writer of foreword), and Paul Chaat Smith (writer of afterword). Officially Indian: Symbols That Define the United States. Washington, D.C.: National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution. 2017. | 5, 130-132 | 2017 | Includes full-page color reproduction of silkscreened print of the Golden Gate International Exposition poster, 1939, by Louis Siegriest (1899-1985) after Ha-So-De (Naciso Platero Abeyta, 1918-1998). | Published in conjunction with the exhibition Americans, opening at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C., in October 2017. Includes bibliographical references and index. | |
| Highwater, Jamake. The Sweet Grass Lives On: Fifty Contemporary North American Indian Artists. New York: Lippincott & Crowell. 1980. | 92-95 | 1980 | | |
| Hill, Stephen W. " Fiercely Ascending: The Legacy of Ha-So-De". May, 1994. The Indian Trader. | 15-19 | | Newspaper article | |
| Hill, Stephen W. "Narcisco and Tony Abeyta are Featured in New Show at Wheelwright Museum". April 1994. The Indian Trader. | 13-14 | | Newspaper article | |
| Huldermann, Paul F. Fourth Scottsdale National Indian Arts Exhibition. Scottsdale, Arizona: Scottsdale National. 1965. | 11-12 | 1965 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Jacka, Lois Essary. ~"Ancient Traditions, New Horizons". Arizona Highways, vol. 62, no. 5 (May 1986). 1986. | 31 | 1986 | | |
| Johnson, Oscar Brousse. American Indian Painters. Vol. II, 1950. Nice, France: C. Szwedzicki. | plate 63 | | | |
| Jones, Hester. ~"Museum of New Mexico's Second National Traveling Exhibition of Contemporary Southwestern Indian Paintings". El Palacio, vol. 63, no. 1 (January 1956). January 1956. | 3-4 | January 1956 | | |
| Jones, Justin (curator). Southwest Native American Art from the M/M Robb Moore Collection: [Exhibition] April 7-June 27, 1988, Native American Art Gallery, Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art. Shawnee, Oklahoma: Robert G. Dodson Memorial Association, Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art. 1988. | catalog is not paginated | 1988 | Entered under Ha-So-De, alternate name for artist Narciso Platero Abeyta. | Includes catalog of 21 works in the collection; entries include artist name, title of work, medium, size, date, and cultural affiliation. | |
| Lester, Patrick D. ~The Biographical Directory of Native American Painters. Tulsa, Oklahoma: SIR Publications. 1995. | 2 | 1995 | Includes tribal index and bibliographical references. | |
| Link, Martin. "Narciso P. Abeyta Well-known Navajo Artist Dies at Age 79". July 1998. The Indian Trader. | 16-17 | | | |
| Matuz, Roger (editor). ~St. James Guide to Native North American Artists. Detroit, Michigan: St. James Press. 1997. | 2-3 | 1997 | | |
| Meyer, Bonnie. "Gallup Library Offers View of Past". July 24, 1981. Gallup, N.M.: Gallup Independent. | unknown | | Newspaper article | |
| Monthan, Guy and Doris Monthan. "Ha-So-De: One of the First Individualists". American Indian Art, vol. 1, no. 3 (summer 1976). 1976. | 34-39 | 1976 | | |
| Pardue, Diana F. and Norman L. Sandfield. Awa Tsireh, Pueblo Painter and Metalsmith. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 2017. | 155 | 2017 | Publication accompanying an exhibition with the same title and held at the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona, November 4, 2017-July 1, 2018; includes bibliographical references and index. | |
| Philbrook Art Center. 15th Annual National Competition: American Indian Painting and Sculpture. Tulsa, Oklahoma: Philbrook Art Center. 1960. | unpaginated | 1960 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Riniker, Sue. "Showing His True Colors". Thursday, February 16, 1989. Gallup, N.M.: The Independent. | unknown | | Newspaper article | |
| Ripp, Bart. "11 Indian Painters Created a Treasure at Maisel's". March, 1988. The Indian Trader. | 22-24 | | Newspaper article | |
| Rosebrough, Rose. "Gallup Artist Mentioned". November 19, 1989. Gallup, N.M.: Gallup Independent. | unknown | | Newspaper article | |
| Rushing, W. Jackson, III. Generations in Modern Pueblo Painting: the Art of Tonita Peña and Joe Herrera. Norman, Oklahoma: Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art. 2018. | 43 | 2018 | Catalog of the exhibition "Generations in Modern Pueblo Painting" at the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, Norman, Oklahoma, January 26, 2018 - April 8, 2018. Includes bibliographical references. | |
| Secord, Paul R. The Maisel's Murals 1939: Native American Art of the American Southwest. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Sunstone Press. 2018. | 39, 67 | 2018 | Includes brief biographies of artists, bibliographical references, and index. | |
| Secord, Paul R. The Maisel's Murals Restored: Native American Art of the American Southwest: a Viewer Guide. Albuquerque, New Mexico: Secord Books. 2020. | 40 | 2020 | Native artists who painted the Maisel's Murals are Narciso Platero Abeyta, Ha So De (1918-1998); Harrison Begay, Haashké yah Níyá (The Wandering Boy), (1914-2012); Wilson Dewey (1915-1969); Joe H. Herrera, See Ru (Blue Bird), (1923-2001); Merina Lujan Hopkins, Pop Chalee (Blue Flower), (1906-1993); Tony Martinez, Popovi Da (Red Fox), (1922-1971); Ignatius Palmer (1922-1985); Ben Quintana, Há-ā-tee (1923-1944); Alfonso Roybal, Awa Tsireh (1895-1955); Theodore Suina, Ku-Pe-Ru (Snow), (1918-aft. 2018?); and Pablita Velarde, Tse Twan (Golden Dawn), (1918-2006). | |
| Seymour, Tryntje Van Ness. When the Rainbow Touches Down: the Artists and Stories Behind the Apache, Navajo, Rio Grande Pueblo, and Hopi Paintings in the William and Leslie Van Ness Denman Collection. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 1988. | 89, 344 | 1988 | Catalog of an exhibition; catalog was distributed by the University of Washington Press. | |
| Silberman, Arthur. 100 Years of Native American Painting, March 5-April 16, 1978, the Oklahoma Museum of Art, Oklahoma City. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: Oklahoma Museum of Art. 1978. | 36 | 1978 | Introduction by Jamake Highwater. | |
| Snodgrass, Jeanne O. (compiler). ~American Indian Painters: a Biographical Directory. New York, New York: Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. 1968. | 1-2 | 1968 | Issued as vol. 21, part 1 in the series, Contributions from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation | |
| Strickland, Rennard. ~"Where Have All the Blue Deer Gone? Depth and Diversity in Post War Indian Painting". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 10, no. 2 (spring 1985). 1985. | 37 | 1985 | Traces the evolution of Native American easel art with an emphasis upon the so-called modern or new directions in contemporary Indian painting, as seen in three generations of Indian artists who span the era from the end of World War II to the present. | |
| Tanner, Clara Lee. ~Southwest Indian Painting: a Changing Art. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press. 1973. | 354-358, 459 | 1973 | Second edition. Includes indexed list of illustrations by artist, bibliographical references, and general index. | |
| Tanner, Clara Lee. Southwest Indian Painting. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press. 1957. | 128-129, 154 | 1957 | | |
| Tanner, Clara Lee and Helga Teiwes (photographer). ~The James T. Bialac Collection of Southwest Indian Paintings. Tucson, Arizona: Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona. 1968. | unpaginated | 1968 | | |
| Thoeny, Oscar. Paintings by American Indian Artists from the Collection of Dr. and Mrs. Oscar Thoeny. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 1973. | 4 | 1973 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Touchette, Charleen (curator) and Suzanne Deats (author of artist profiles). Ndn Art. Albuquerque, New Mexico: Fresco Fine Art Publications. 2003. | 15, 18 | 2003 | Artists profiles include R.C. Gorman, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Charlene Teters, Cheyenne Harris, Dan Namingha, Arlo Namingha, Les Namingha, Doug Hyde, David Johns, Ramona Sakiestewa, Margarete Bagshaw-Tindel, Nathan Youngblood, Susan Folwell, Michael A. Naranjo, Richard Zane Smith, Al Qoyawayma, Virgil Ortiz, Fritz Scholder, Kevin Red Star, Armond Lara, Rick Bartow, Anita Fields, Margaret Wood, Christine Nofchissey McHorse, Joel C. McHorse, Ed Archie Noisecat, Celeste Worl, Dorothy Grandbois, Doug Coffin, and Preston Singletary. In the New Mexico artist series. | |
| WalkingStick, Kay and Ann E. Marshall. So Fine! Masterworks of Fine Art from the Heard Museum. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 2001. | 10 | 2001 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| White, Mark Andrew (editor). The James T. Bialac Native American Art Collection: Selected Works. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press in cooperation with the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art. 2012. | 44, 110-111, 107, 137 | 2012 | Compilation of essays by various authors with a selected bibliography and index. | |
| Whyte, Malcolm and Andrew C. Weislogel (organizers). Walk in Beauty: Discovering American Indian Art: American Indian Paintings and Sculpture from the Collection of Malcolm and Karen Whyte. Ithaca, New York: Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University. 2007. | 10, 52 | 2007 | Catalog of an exhibition organized by Malcolm Whyte and Andrew C. Weislogel for the Herbert F. Johnson Museum at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, March 31, 2007-July 8, 2007. Exhibition is dedicated to Harry Fonseca (1946-2006). | |
| Wikipedia contributors. "Narciso Abeyta". In: Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia (host URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/) at source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narciso_Abeyta. 2013. | | 2013 | Current entry for Narciso Abeyta in Wikipedia (viewed October 26, 2020); webpage created December 7, 2013, revised and updated irregularly. | View |
| Wyckoff, Lydia (editor). ~Visions and Voices: Native American Painting from the Philbrook Museum of Art. Tulsa, Oklahoma: Philbrook Museum of Art. 1996. | 30-31, 61-62 | 1996 | Preface by Marcia Y. Manhart; foreword by Jeanne Snodgrass King; contributions by Ruthe Blalock Jones, Marla Redcorn, and Andrea Rogers-Henry. Includes bibliographical references and index. | |
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