Navajo Wedding
Basket
Artist Unknown
18" diameter
Native American basketry is
one of the earliest art forms. The Indians made them as utilitarian
pieces for storage, holding water and even cooking.
Basketry is an ancient craft
of the Indian people; it even precedes pottery making. Baskets
used for cooking were lined with clay, and water vessels were
covered with pine pitch. Today basket making has developed into
a fine art, that few Native Americans continue to practice.
Where baskets were once a
common item among all tribes, the art has now disappeared among
many Native Americans, and the handful of weavers that continue
this ancient craft are few and far between.
The Navajo ceremonial basket,
also called Navajo wedding basket, is viewed as a map through
which the Navajo chart their lives. The central spot in the basket
represents the sipapu, where the Navajo people emerged from the
prior world through a reed.
The inner coils of the basket
are white to represent birth.
As you travel outward on the coils you begin to encounter more
and more black. The black represents darkness, struggle and pain.