Curator’s Choice: Prizewinning BasketsFebruary 2011 Scroll down for more images and info.
Photos by Jannelle Weakly
Can't see the zoomable image gallery? Coiled bowl basket circa 1917 Willow, devils claw, cattail-stem foundation
Scale relative to a human hand Height: 4.2 in. (9.3 cm.), Diameter: 15.5 in. (34.0 cm.) Purchase, 2009 Coiled dog figure circa 1961 Yucca, devils claw, and beargrass
Scale relative to a human hand Width: 5.5 in. (12.0 cm.), Height: 10.2 in. (22.5 cm.) Purchase Text by Diane Dittemore,
Ethnological Collections Curator. I chose these two older prizewinning O’odham basketry gems in honor of our Southwest Indian Art Fair (SWIAF) juried competition. SWIAF’s award program is 15 years old, but as these First Place winners attest, juries in southern Arizona have been assigning prizes to fine Native arts for more than a century. The two objects are distinct in style but represent quality coiled basketry for which the O’odham are rightly famous: The first three images are of a bowl basket woven of willow and devils claw, with a cattail-stem foundation. It is a traditional bowl shape, with a swastika meander design. The bowl was probably made around 1917, when it received the attached blue ribbon indicating 1st Premium in the 7th Annual Pima Fair, School Division. It is unfortunate that the ribbon did not include a place to record the weaver’s name! She (or possibly he) may have been Tohono O’odham (Papago) or Akimel O’odham (Pima). The Arizona State Museum (ASM) purchased this bowl from an Albuquerque Indian arts dealer in 2009. The remaining images are of a yucca, devils claw, and beargrass coiled dog figure by Lucy Andrew of Santa Rosa Village on the Tohono O’odham Reservation. It won a first place award in the “Novelties” category at the 1961 Pima County Fair. The dog, whose head was coiled as a separate piece, also bears a tag from the “Papago Self-Help Project,” a Quaker-run cooperative initiative that began in the mid-1950s. Elizabeth Estrada, one of the Quakers who was particularly involved in basketry promotion, sold this dog to the Museum; she had been the organizer of the O’odham crafts booth at the county fair. Today another cooperative, the Tohono O’odham Basketry Organization (TOBO) operates under the auspices of the private nonprofit Tohono O’odham Community Action organization ReferencesBreazeale, J.F.
Cain, Thomas
Dewald, Terry
Fontana, Bernard L.
Kissell, Mary Lois
Robinson, Bert
Shreve, Margaret
Tanner, Clara Lee
Whiteford, Andrew Hunter
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