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.


As you make your way through the darkness you eventually reach the red bands, which represent marriage; the mixing of your blood with your spouse and creation of family. The red is pure.

During this time there is no darkness. Traveling out of familial bands you encounter more darkness, however, the darkness is interspersed with white light. The light represents increasing enlightenment, which expands until you enter the all white banding of the outer rim. This banding represents the spirit world, where there is no darkness.

The line from the center of the basket to the outer rim is there to remind you that no matter how much darkness you encounter in your world, there is always a
pathway to the light. This pathway during ceremonies is always pointed east. The last coil on the basket rim is finished off at this pathway to allow the medicine man to easily locate it in darkness.

Additionally the Navajo Ceremonial Basket serves another purpose. In none of the ancient Navajo rites is a regular drum or tom-tom employed. The inverted basket serves the purpose.

Special Collections

Sale: $300.00
(plus sh/han)


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item, please contact Brandon:
sales@ancientnations.com

1.800.854.1359

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