| Heard Museum (organizer). Toward the Morning Sun: Navajo Pictorial Textiles from the Jean-Paul and Rebecca Valette Collection. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum. 2022. | 30-31, 35-36, 40-41 | 2022 | Catalog of an exhibition presented at the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona, from November 5, 2021-March 6, 2022. Primary contributors include Venancio Aragon, Ann E. Marshall, Velma Kee Craig, Roshii Montaño, and Kevin Aspaas. Catalog of a collection of Navajo textiles donated by Rebecca and Jean-Paul Valette to the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona. | |
| Schaaf, Gregory, and Angie Yan Schaaf. American Indian Textiles: 2,000 Artist Biographies, C. 1800-present: with Value/Price Guide Featuring over 20 Years of Auction Records. Santa Fe, New Mexico: CIAC Press. 2001. | 125 | 2001 | Entry under "Gle-nup-pah". | Volume 3 in the American Indian Art Series. | |
| Valette, Jean-Paul and Rebecca M. Valette. "In Search of Yah-nah-pah: the Early Gallegos 'Yei' Blankets and Their Weavers". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 23, no. 1 (winter 1997). 1997. | 66-68 | 1997 | Analyzes some inconsistencies in the way the few extant single-figure "yei" weavings have been attributed in the scholarly literature and presents new research on the subject, which suggests the existence of a second, previously unrecognized weaver. | |
| Valette, Rebecca M. "Early Navajo Sandpainting Blankets: A Reassessment". American Indian Art Magazine, vol. 37, no. 2 (spring 2012). 2012. | 65 | 2012 | Identifies and analyzes a number of early Navajo Germantown sandpainting blankets and concludes that the majority were woven by Big Left-Handed Woman (̕Asdzáán Nitłá̕i Tsoh) a weaver from Raton Springs, New Mexico, perhaps with the help of a close relative. Includes bibliographical references. | |
| Valette, Rebecca M. and Jean-Paul Valette. Weaving the Dance: Navajo Yeibichai Textiles (1910-1950). Albuquerque, New Mexico: Adobe Gallery. 2000. | 22 | 2000 | Catalog written to accompany the exhibition, "Weaving the Dance: the Yeibichai Tradition in Navajo Rugs (1910-1950)", Museum of Our National Heritage, Lexington, Massachusetts, April 8, 2000-September 10, 2000. Published in association with the University of Washington Press, Seattle, Washington. | |