Sioux BeadworkHaskell Institute, 1933 - 27 Seiten |
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Seite 3
... secured in these conferences , but for the most part the Indian of to - day knows little concerning the early meaning of the symbols and designs . 3 98 طانا HISTORICAL STATEMENT Ever since the discovery of America by Columbus.
... secured in these conferences , but for the most part the Indian of to - day knows little concerning the early meaning of the symbols and designs . 3 98 طانا HISTORICAL STATEMENT Ever since the discovery of America by Columbus.
Seite 4
... early part of the nineteenth century the chief bead- work area has been the country around the Great Lakes and across the western plains . Among the Plains Indians the various branches of the Sioux Tribe have excelled as beadworkers ...
... early part of the nineteenth century the chief bead- work area has been the country around the Great Lakes and across the western plains . Among the Plains Indians the various branches of the Sioux Tribe have excelled as beadworkers ...
Seite 6
... early childhood and work quietly for hours each day on one of the handicrafts which the tribe had made its own . Encouraging results have followed the introduction of this handicraft as an elective in the Pine Ridge Boarding School . A ...
... early childhood and work quietly for hours each day on one of the handicrafts which the tribe had made its own . Encouraging results have followed the introduction of this handicraft as an elective in the Pine Ridge Boarding School . A ...
Seite 7
... earliest pieces of Indian bead embroidery of which we have knowledge . The small seashells with which it is ornamented have had their points ground off and have been sewn to the garment with threads of sinew . Animal and human forms ...
... earliest pieces of Indian bead embroidery of which we have knowledge . The small seashells with which it is ornamented have had their points ground off and have been sewn to the garment with threads of sinew . Animal and human forms ...
Seite 8
... early bead embroidery , notably that of the south- ern Plains Indians , was characterized by the use of isolated designs without a beaded background . The Sioux women some- times embroidered scattered symbols or patterns against a ...
... early bead embroidery , notably that of the south- ern Plains Indians , was characterized by the use of isolated designs without a beaded background . The Sioux women some- times embroidered scattered symbols or patterns against a ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American Indian baby carrier bead embroidery bead weaving Beaded articles birch bark blue broidery buckskin casins ceremonial conventional designs costumes couching stitch craft decoration design elements developed diamond early embroidered floral fringes geometric designs geometric forms give-away handicrafts hide horse horse-track HOUR GLASS Indian School Indian women interest ISOSCELES TRIANGLE large number lazy stitch leggins lightning MOCCASIN DESIGNS moistened native arts number of beads old beadworkers old pieces paints piece of sinew pipe Plains Indians porcupine quills pouches quill and bead rawhide REC'D rectangle Red lines represents reservations ridged saliva seed beads sewing Sioux beadwork Sioux designs SIOUX PATTERNS SHOWING Sioux Tribe Sioux women skin soaked in warm sometimes South Dakota spot stitch stripped symbolic meaning tendon threads tion to-day triangle tribal TYPICAL SIOUX PATTERNS usually VAMP war bonnet warrior woman's dress wounds woven yoke younger women Ц Ц Ц נ נ נ
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 3 - Additional data were obtained by studying collections at the American Museum of Natural History and the Museum of the American Indian.
Seite 25 - ... Poetic description 325 Local culture reflected in literary form 327 Symbolic meaning of narrative 337 Different literary styles are found in the same tribe 337 Distribution of literary forms 338 Music 340 Dance 344 Conclusion 349 Text figures 357 Explanation of plates 373 Name Index 374 This book is an attempt to give an analytical description of the fundamental traits of primitive art. The treatment given to the subject is based on two principles that, I believe, should guide all investigations...
Seite 25 - An attempt to give an analytical description of the fundamental traits of Indian Art— and to determine the dynamic conditions under which art styles grow up.
Seite 3 - With a revival of interest in the native arts and crafts of the American Indian, the Indian Office is encouraging those who are working on the reservations to acquaint themselves with what remains of the Indian handicrafts.
Seite 8 - Another perforation is made to admit the sinew at the end of the row of beads. As in the overlay stitch, the perforation does not pass through to the under side of the skin, but runs horizontally just below the surface, so that no stitches show. The same number of beads is again strung on the sinew, which is carried back to the starting point and passed throjgh another perforation, close to the first one. Thus the pattern is made up of beads sewed down only at the ends of each...
Seite 17 - ... On the upper part of the bag the border figure (c) represents a victory in which the owner's horse, represented by the green diamond-shaped figure, was wounded, as shown by the red area within the horse symbol ; (b) represents a feather, and implies that the owner of the bag was entitled to wear an eagle feather in his hair as a sign that he had killed an enemy. The figures of the pipe indicate the owner's right to carry the official peace pipe. The parts of this design are not new and so not...
Seite 9 - The first bead frames were made of ash tied with sinew at the corners and were almost square.
Seite 17 - The turtle was used as a talisman. The U-shaped design below the yoke of the woman's dress represented the breast of a turtle, the wing-like extension corresponding to the sides of the shell.
Seite 7 - The small seashells with which it is ornamented have had their points ground off and have been sewn to the garment with threads of sinew.
Seite 13 - To-day some of the older women make designs by folding and tearing or cutting paper, thus insuring a balanced pattern. Folded and torn (or bitten) patterns may have been derived from similarly manufactured patterns of birch bark made by the Indians of the Great Lakes and eastern Canada.