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Unknown Maker, A:shiwi (Zuñi)

Kachina Doll

Maker

Unknown Maker, A:shiwi (Zuñi)

Culture

A:shiwi (Zuñi), Native North American

Title

Kachina Doll

Year

early 1900s

Medium

  • painted wood

Materials/Techniques

Techniques

  • Painted wood

Materials

wood, paint

Geography

Place Made: New Mexico

Dimensions

Height: 18.1 cm (7 1/8 inches)

Credit / Object Number

Credit

Gift of Mr. Henry D. Sharpe

Object Number

17.021

Type

  • Sculpture

Exhibition History

Form, Pattern, and Function
Design in American Indian Art
Dec 04, 1992 – Jan 24, 1993

Label copy

To the Hopi and Zuni Indians, the word "kachina" has two meanings. Most important are the spirit-beings who live in the underworld and are the intermediaries between people and the gods, bringing fire, rain, and sunshine, or who represent animals, plants, ogres, war leaders and other important figures in legend and mythology. For several months a year these kachinas come to live in the pueblos, from time to time performing dances. During this time they are impersonated by men who take the form of the spirits, wearing the distinctive masks and costumes of each kachina. These personators are also called "kachinas."

Small carved wooden kachina figures are customarily given to children to teach them to recognize the kachinas in their costumes as they impersonate the spirits. They are neither idols nor dolls, but are serious and treasured teaching devices which occupy a prominent place in a home, being attached to rafters or displayed on walls. The Museum's collection includes a figure of the Zuni kachina maiden Hoho Mana, of uncertain function, but a form that derives from a kachina mask found in an Awatovi pictograph dating to prehistoric times, as well as a Zuni warrior kachina. Also in the collection is a Hopi kachina with elaborate tableta, Polik Mana, the butterfly kachina maiden, collected before 1919 in Oraibi Pueblo, Arizona, and purchased from trader Fred Harvey. This kachina has a rainbow mouth and a headdress of clouds, personifying the beauty and fertility of the earth that follows the rain. All the Museum's kachinas are of an early type with less detail than figures made in the 20th century.

Image use

The images on this website can enable discovery and collaboration and support new scholarship, and we encourage their use.

Public Domain This object is in the Public Domain and available under a CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain Dedication

Tombstone

Unknown Maker, A:shiwi (Zuñi)
Kachina Doll, early 1900s
Painted wood
Height: 18.1 cm (7 1/8 inches)
Gift of Mr. Henry D. Sharpe 17.021

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Feedback

We view our online collection as a living documents, and our records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you have additional information or have spotted an error, please send feedback to curatorial@risd.edu.

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