Navajo Corn Spirit Basket Set - Elsie Holiday (#231)
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Navajo Baskets
Corn Set of Three
Top Basket (with lid) - 14" tall x 12 1/2" wide
Opening - 9 1/2" Circumference - 32 5/8"
Lid - 3 1/4" tall x 11 1/8" wide
Bottom Left Basket - 10 1/2" tall x 12" wide
Opening - 11" Circumference - 37 5/8"
Bottom Right Basket - 14" tall x 11 1/2" wide
Opening - 5 3/8" Circumference - 19 5/8"
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About the artist:
Considered one of the best Navajo basket weavers, Elsie Stone Holiday married into the famed Douglas Mesa family of weavers. Weaving baskets has become almost an addiction for her. "When I go two or three days without weaving I get anxious to get started again," she says. She weaves 12 hours a day, 5 days a week. "Sometimes I think, 'How long can this last?'", she wistfully states, but for now she is content with her art, finding immense satisfaction in creating premier quality baskets.
See full biography | See all items by Elsie HolidayRelated categories:
Navajo Baskets See all items in this categoryRelated legends:
Corn Spirits in Navajo Mythology
Then it was that they moved upward, leaving the dark world behind. They climbed on top of the Four Mountains, which grew upward with them, and they all moved up onto a lighter world. The Wind People brought seeds into the new world, and they planted them:?
More about this legendCorn in Navajo Traditional Life
The Supernaturals also warn him of taboos connected with the use of corn. It should not be cooked until it is ripe nor eaten before it is fully cooked, or frost and floods will damage the crop. In the "vigil of the corn" ceremony the corn is fed with dried meat; if it were to be fed with corn it would thus consume itself, just as feeding meat to the masks would cause men to eat each other. When giving this warning Talking God refers to the time that ugly woman fed corn to the corn with result that " the people starved and men ate the flesh of other men."?
More about this legendNavajo Basketry
Basketry is a woman's industry, which is also pursued by the nadle (he changes), hermaphrodites, or men skilled in the arts and industries of both men and women. Basketry, however, is not classified with textile fabrics (yistl'o), but with sewing (nalkhad). It is of interest also that, while the basket is in progress, the sewer is untouched and avoided by the members of her family?
More about this legend
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