Navajo Black Storm Rug - Mae Johnson (#0016)
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Black Storm
30 1/2" x 40 1/2"
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Explaining the storm design presents a bit of a dilemma. The pattern
is created by weaving artists from all corners of the Navajo
reservation and beyond, yet pinpointing its origin and meaning is a
different story, or I will say, several stories.
Although
storm pattern rugs later became associated with Tuba Trading Post on
the western side of the Navajo reservation, many feel it first made its
appearance and was first popularized by J.B. Moore, a short-lived but
influential trader at the Crystal Trading Post in the nineteen-teens.
In his first catalogue published in 1911, he featured two weavings with
the quincunx (I love this word...it was one of Kira’s spelling bee
words last year) layout and attributed the pattern to one family
designated specifically to weave what became known as the storm design.
Our
culture loves asking the question, “...but, what does it mean?” The
first story comes from Cameron Trading Post: Jean Mann, a weaver from
the area explained that the center of the rug, in the square part, was
the weaver’s home or the weaver’s hooghan. Lightning connects the
weaver to the four sacred mountains that form the border of Dinetah.
These mountains are the squares in each corner of the rug. The rain is
the warp of the rug. Centipedes flank the hooghan on each side. In
early versions of storm weavings, above and below there were whirling
logs close to the hooghan. This symbol, similar to and because of, the
Nazi swastika was later changed to look like another centipede.
Outward from this element is the 6-legged water bug. The whole rug
symbolizes a storm and also portrays the storm as a sacred occurrence.
My
understanding is that J.B. Moore had a fondness for Oriental weavings
and possibly introduced Eastern rug patterns to the local weavers. An
explanation given by the Navajo Rug Repair Company, experts in cleaning
and repairing Oriental and Navajo weavings, lends credence to this
theory. They state, “One story about the design origin is that it was
derived from the labels on flour sacs sold to Navajos in the early
years. This author has not been able to find any flour sac labels that
show anything like this design (the same story is often written
concerning the swastika design as found in some Navajo rugs). I
theorize that the Storm Pattern's origin lies within Kufic script that
is found in Persian, Caucasian and other Mid-eastern rugs, particularly
in the borders of those rugs. The "Storm Pattern" design shows the
favored quincunx pattern, a ubiquitous design styling in the Orient.”
I
like what Ann Hedlund, a cultural anthropologist and director of the
Gloria F. Ross Center for Tapestry Studies at the Arizona State Museum
in Tucson has to say about J.B. Moore’s introduction of the design:
“In
1911, trader J.B. Moore published a catalogue showing a Navajo rug with
a central rectangle, four zigzag arms radiating to the corners, and
bold, isolated geometric motifs along the ends and sides. Stating,
‘This pattern is one of the really legendary designs embodying a
portion of the Navajo mythology,’ Moore started his own legend that has
yet to be unraveled or understood. No earlier Navajo design resembles
this one—in weaving, sandpainting, or any other medium.” Professor
Hedlund’s explanation supports the idea of outside influences on Navajo
weaving and to me, belongs in the category I have endearingly titled
“Great White Trader Stories”.
Ann Hedlund chimes in again with the following thoughts:
“Weavers
today differ in their interpretation of the motifs and layout. Some
deny knowledge of any symbols and say the stories came from traders.
Others suggest that maybe the center symbolizes a Navajo hogan, a lake,
or the center of the universe; the corner elements are spoken of
variably as the four sacred mountains, the four winds, or the four
cardinal directions. The radiating zigzag lines are usually called
lightning lines or whirling logs. The individual motifs at both ends
are called water bugs or pinon beetles.”
Whatever their murky
beginnings, storm pattern weavings have since become one of the most
popular Navajo rug designs and invite many interpretations as to their
meaning.
---Georgiana Kennedy Simpson
About the artist:
Related categories:
Navajo Storm Pattern Rugs See all items in this categoryRelated legends:
Weaving
After the
medicine woman told the people about the prayersticks she told them that there
was a place in the underworld where two rivers crossed. It was called ni tqin'kae
tsosi, fine fiber cotton (Indian hemp). There were two persons who brought the
seed of that plant, they were spiders. They said that the people were to use the
plant instead of skins for their clothing. So this seed was planted in the earth? More about this legend
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