| . "Artists at Work". Native American Art, issue 19 (February/March 2019). 2019. | 72 | 2019 | List of artist demonstrators with biographical sketches at the Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market 2019, Phoenix, Arizona. | |
| . "Basket Weaving Exhibited". October, 1984. The Indian Trader. | 23 | | Newspaper article | |
| . "Guide to Market, Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market". Native American Art, issue 19 (February/March 2019). 2019. | 137 | 2019 | Sections includes the following: Jewelry & Lapidary; Pottery; Paintings, Drawings, Photography & Graphics; Pueblo Carvings; Scupture; Weavings & Textiles; Diverse Arts including Beadwork & Quillwork; Baskets; Personal Attire; and Youth. | |
| Arnold, Dean E. "Ethnology: Seven Families in Pueblo Pottery". American Anthropologist, vol. 79, no. 3 (September 1977). 1977. | 672-674 | 1977 | | |
| Bernstein, Bruce. "Connoisseur's Guide to Indian Market". Santa Fean, vol. 23, no. 7 (August 1995). 1995. | 76 | 1995 | | |
| Bernstein, Bruce D. and Susan Brown McGreevy (curators). ~Anii Ánáádaalyaa̕ ĺgíí (Recent Ones That Are Made): Continuity & Innovation in Recent Navajo Art. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian. 1988. | 17, 19-21, 40 | 1988 | Catalog of an exhibition at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, Santa Fe, New Mexico, July 10, 1988-October 30, 1988. | |
| Collier, Randy. "Indian Craftsmen Becoming More Universal". December 15, 1986. The Arizona Republic. | | | Newspaper article | |
| Dalrymple, Larry, with a foreword by Susan Brown McGreevy. Indian Basketmakers of the Southwest: the Living Art and Fine Tradition. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Museum of New Mexico Press. 2000. | 77, 81, 88-89, 125 | 2000 | Includes index. | |
| Herold, Joyce. "Basket Weaver Individualists in the Southwest Today". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 9, no. 2 (spring 1984). 1984. | 53, 63 | 1984 | Suggests that while basketry has been the most conservative Southwestern art form, basket weavers today are in the midst of an important transition, able to choose more consciously between traditionalism and innovation. Includes bibliographical references (p. 63). | |
| Jacka, Lois Essary. "The Navajos and Their Art". Arizona Highways, vol. 70, no. 11 (November 1994). 1994. | 18-23 | 1994 | | |
| Jacka, Lois Essary and Jerry Jacka. "Weaves of Grass". v. 73, November, 1997. Arizona Highways. | 18-23 | | | |
| Lewallen, Arlene. Nourishing Heart, Creative Hands: Contemporary Art by Native American Women. Hampton, Va.: Hampton University Museum. 1998. | 5 | 1998 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Lineberry, Heather Sealy, ed. Intertwined: Contemporary Baskets from the Sara and David Lieberman. Tempe, Ariz.: Arizona State University Art Museum. 2005. | 20, 41 | 2005 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Lynch-McWhite, Wyona, Bruce Pepich, and Ann McMullen. All Things Considered VI: Juried & Invitational Exhibition. Brasstown, N.C.: National Basketry Organization. 2011. | 9, 17 | 2011 | Catalog of an exhibition | |
| Margolin, Malcolm, ed. "Special Report: Western Regional Indigenous Basketweavers Gathering". v. 13, no. 1, Fall, 1999. News from Native California. | 37 | | | |
| Mauldin, Barbara. Traditions in Transition: Contemporary Basket Weaving of the Southwestern Indians. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Museum of New Mexico Press. 1984. | | 1984 | Issued on the occasion of an exhibition circulated by the Education Unit, Museum of New Mexico. Includes bibliographical references (pages 61-62) and index. | |
| McGreevy, Susan Brown. "Embellishing the Spiral: Design Development in Navajo Baskets". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 24, no. 3 (summer 1999). 1999. | 46, 51-53 | 1999 | Includes bibliographical references; article in the "Baskety Issue" of American Indian Art Magazine for summer 1999. | |
| McGreevy, Susan Brown. "The Other Weavers: Navajo Basket Makers and the Museum's Collection". Messenger (Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian), summer 1993. 1993. | cover, 6, back cover | 1993 | Newsletter article. Include bibliographical references. Basket makers noted in article include Mary Holiday Black family, Sally Black, and Kee Bitsinni. | |
| McGreevy, Susan Brown. "What Makes Sally Weave: Survival and Innovation in Navajo Basketry Trays". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 14, no. 3 (summer 1989). 1989. | 38-45 | 1989 | Discusses the recent proliferation of original designs used in Navajo basketry, in particular in the ts̕aa̕, tray- or dish-shaped baskets used for processing and serving food and for a variety of ritual functions. Featured basket makers include Mary Holiday Black, Sally Black, Kee Bitsinni, Zonnie Bowsley, and Rose Esplain, with an emphasis on members of the Black family. | |
| Mooney, Sean (guest curator) and Heard Museum (organizer). Substance of Stars. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 2022. | 78 | 2022 | Catalog published to coincide with the exhibition "Substance of Stars", organized by the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona, and presented fall 2022. | |
| Ortiz, Beverly R. "Following the Smoke". News from Native California, vol. 11, no. 3 (spring 1998). 1998. | 37 | 1998 | | |
| Robertson, Linda B. "Folk Art at the Maxwell". v. 10, no. 4, November, 1986. Museum Anthropology. | 34 | | | |
| Tack, Eric David. "Reweaving Tradition". Native Peoples, vol. 13, no. 6 (September-October 2000). 2000. | 22-27 | 2000 | | |
| Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian. "Collections: Thank You to Donors for 1992 Acquisitions". Messenger (Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian), summer 1993. 1993. | 10 | 1993 | Donation of artworks by Pablita Velarde, Maria & Julian, Gail Bird and Yazzie Johnson, Gina Gray, Ramona Sakiestewa, Sally Black, Cora Black, Evelyn Cly, Silas B. Claw, Debe Kligin, Lyn Stevens, Juanita Stevens, and Emmi Whitehorse cited. | |
| Whiteford, Andrew Hunter. Southwestern Indian Baskets: Their History and Their Makers. Santa Fe, New Mexico: School of American Research Press. 1988. | 41-42, 67, 182 | 1988 | Includes bibliographical references and index. | |
| Whiteford, Andrew Hunter and Kate McGraw. The Art of Basketmaking: A Buyer's Guide to Southwestern Indian Basketry. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Southwestern Association for Indian Arts. 1995. | | 1995 | | |
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