Navajo Yei Turtle Pictorial Basket - Sonya Black (#042)

Navajo Yei Turtle Pictorial Basket - Sonya Black (#042)
Navajo Yei Turtle Pictorial Basket - Sonya Black (#042)
Navajo Yei Turtle Pictorial Basket - Sonya Black (#042)
Navajo Yei Turtle Pictorial Basket - Sonya Black (#042)

Navajo Yei Turtle Pictorial Basket - Sonya Black (#042)

Navajo Pictorial Basket
Yei Turtle
13"


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About the artist:

Sonja Black Daughter of Peggy Black - Basketweaver: One of the Douglas Mesa basket weavers, there wasn't much question about what Peggy Rock Black would choose to pursue in life. She was born into a family of weavers before she married into an equally talented family of weavers. Willow baskets were her predestined avocation. Peggy developed her inherent skills well, and has found her niche by becoming one of the few weavers who can successfully incorporate pictorial images into her baskets. See full biography | See all items by Sonja Black

Related categories:

Navajo Baskets - Sonya Black See all items in this category

Related legends:

Turtle & Frog
This episode appears in four versions of the attack on the Pueblo. It precedes the story of the main attack or constitutes this attack. The scalps which they obtain are, however, not the object of the suitor test. Frog and turtle kill the enemy or their young women. They have hidden in the "walled up water supply" which is drawn off to reveal them? More about this legend

Yeis
Every creature, every aspect of nature has its holy people . . . . even the stinkbug. Sometimes you can see them, if only for an instant. They are represented, some of them, by colors: the blue sky, the evening dusk, the night these are holy people and one prays to them. There are iron people, crystal people, then the other rocks " and such people." There are dawn people, twilight people, air, thunder, and cloud people. One does not talk about such things in nature when they and their holy people are present. More about this legend

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

Navajo Ceremonial Baskets
The Navajo wedding basket also reflects many values of traditional life and so often contains all six sacred mountains, including Huerfano and Gobernador Knob, though the size of the basket may determine the numher of mountains in the design. The center spot in the basket represents the beginning of this world, where the Navajo people emerged from a reed? More about this legend

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This site was last updated on October 7, 2008

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