art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar
perrytrails, to NativeAmerican
@perrytrails@ieji.de avatar
art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

For :
figure by Melvin Olanna, 1968
Inupiat Eskimo, Shishmaref, Alaska, USA
Yellow cedar wood, L 32 x W 18.5 x H 20.5 cm
25/6106 Indian Arts & Crafts Board Collection, DOI, at Smithsonian NMAI

photo of the virtual label from information monitor at museum- text transcribed in post

art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

:
shell effigy decorated w/ turquoise & shell mosaic
Hohokam Culture (300 BCE-1450 CE)
House mound (IV). XIV (Los Muertos, AZ, USA), collected 1892
5x4.7x2.3cm (1 15/16 x 1 7/8 x 7/8 in)
Harvard Peabody Museum:
https://collections.peabody.harvard.edu/objects/details/1946

Top down side profile view
top down underside view (showing bare shell)

art_history_animalia, to octopus
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

It's 🐙and I'm awestruck by this incredible platter! Traditional carved argillite, late 19th c., from Haida Gwaii (Queen Charlotte Islands, BC, Canada). 3 x 20 x 29.6 cm. Anchorage Museum 1977.008.001: http://onlinecollections.anchoragemuseum.org/uploaded_files/1977-008-001-2.jpg

art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar
art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

A pretty in pink from
the Harvard Peabody Museum collection:

  1. Fetish frog
    Yaqui culture, Sonora, Mexico
    rhodochrosite w/ turquoise eyes
    2.5x5.7x5.9cm
    https://collections.peabody.harvard.edu/objects/details/599446

2 Fetish standing bear
Zuñi culture, New Mexico, USA
rhodochrosite w/ turquoise eyes & necklace
7x3.3x3.2cm
https://collections.peabody.harvard.edu/objects/details/599389

pink stone standing bear fetish figurine (with turquoise bead eyes & necklace)

art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

:
2 beaded figure pendants by Emma Marks, culture (Juneau, Alaska, USA)
collected 1973-4
glass beads, thread, felt backing, suede backing & strap
8.2 x 6.7 x 0.5 cm (3 1/4 x 2 5/8 x 3/16 in.)
6.8 x 8.8 x 0.7 cm (2 11/16 x 3 7/16 x 1/4 in.)
Harvard Peabody Museum 974-12-10/52237A, 974-12-10/52237C
https://collections.peabody.harvard.edu/objects/details/580711
https://collections.peabody.harvard.edu/objects/details/433066

museum photo of beaded frog pendant #2 green, light blue, red, white, black, white, orange, yellow, with dark brown strap

art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

Here's a funky friend for :
, c.1960-80
Ted Puhuyesua, Diné (Navajo)
Hoatvela (Hotevilla),Third Mesa, Hopi Reservation; Navajo County, AZ, USA
carved & painted wood w/ feathers, 17.5 x 7 x 5 cm
@SmithsonianNMAI
NMAI_270961: https://si.edu/object/frog-kachina%3ANMAI_270961

art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

For when falls on (and ):
Button blanket with &
c. late 19th - early 20th c.
Gitxsan culture (British Columbia, Canada)
wool, cotton, shell, graphite
130 cm x 188.5 cm
UBC Museum of Anthropology 3051/7: http://collection-online.moa.ubc.ca/search/item?keywords=Gitxsan+button+blanket&row=0

art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

:
-Shaped Bowl, c. 1890–1920
Native North America, NW Coast, Alaska, Tlingit?
Wood, 11.3 x 27 x 18.7 cm (4 7/16 x 10 5/8 x 7 3/8 in.)
Cleveland Museum of Art 2009.434: https://www.clevelandart.org/art/2009.434

official museum photo of the the beaver bowl on grey background, view 2
official museum photo of the the beaver bowl on grey background, view 3

art_history_animalia, to random
@art_history_animalia@historians.social avatar

For here are 2 examples of (aka killer whale) headdresses from the Northwest Coast that the dancer could animate with moving parts:
1 Haida - “dancer could roll its eyes or move lower jaw”
Carnegie Museum of Natural History
2 Kwakiutl - “dancer pulled strings to make the pectoral fins, tail flukes & jaw move”
Field Museum

Killer Whale Headdress. The dancer pulled strings to make the pectoral fins, tail flukes and jaw move. Used in the Tlásulá. Kwakiutl (Fort Rupert). 19271 Field Museum

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