Maker(s): | LaCapa Jr., Leo
| Culture: | Native American; Hopi (1900s)
| Title: | Morning Singer (Talavai) Kachina
| Date Made: | 1960s-1970s
| Type: | Sculpture
| Materials: | cottonwood root, felt, feathers, plastic, yarn, paint
| Place Made: | United States; Arizona; Polacca; First Mesa; Hopi Reservation
| Measurements: | 11 3/8 in.; 28.8925 cm
| Accession Number: | SC 1981.25.18
| Credit Line: | Gift of Katherine Gabel, class of 1959
| Museum Collection: | Smith College Museum of Art
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Description: The Morning Singer kachina displays a white "rayed" feather headdress atop his blue head. He has red ears, painted eyes, cloud motifs below his eyes, and a carved "o" shaped mouth. Around his neck is a Juniper or Douglas Fir wreath, with a colorful cloak around his back and painted blue and yellow designs down his chest. His multicolored arms include a black yarn bracelet and a cuff. His waist accoutrements include a red patterned sash, as well as a white patterned "kilt." Red boots are shown on his blue and yellow legs, whereas his hands hold a silver bell and a branch of Juniper or Douglas Fir. Shown signing and dancing on top of a wood platform, he was carved for the tourist trade. AP2018
Tags: men; religion; ceremonies; kachina dolls Link to share this object record: https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=SC+1981.25.18 |