Havasupai figural coiled basket
Havasupai figural coiled basket
8 1/16” diameter x 3 3/8” high
coiled out of willow and devil’s claw
excellent condition
ex: Private Collection
SOLD
mc2253
The Havasupai live in the Havasu Canyon, which adjoins the Grand Canyon. They live near other Apache and weave with the same materials (willow and devil's claw). Their designs are remarkably similar to the Yavapai but they can be distinguished by some technical details. Havasupai baskets are fairly rare, perhaps because they had limited trade with others due to the difficulty they had in getting their baskets to the top of the canyon and thus to traders. In addition, they are a fairly small tribe.
8 1/16" diameter x 3 3/8" high
16-17 stitches per inch
7 coils per inch
woven out of willow and devil's claw
excellent condition
ex: Private Collection
circa 1919-1940s
(mc2253)
The Havasupai lived in the Havasu Canyon, which adjoins the Grand Canyon. The Havasupai lived at the bottom of the canyon and were thus more isolated than other Southwestern tribes. That is why we rarely see Havasupai baskets in the market.
They live near other Apache and weave with the same materials (willow and devil's claw). Their designs are remarkably similar to the Yavapai but they can be distinguished by some technical details. Havasupai baskets are fairly rare, perhaps because they had limited trade with others due to the difficulty they had in getting their baskets to the top of the canyon and thus to traders. In addition, they are a fairly small tribe.
Trade in American Indian baskets has always rewarded those with figural design elements, human and animal.
*Leslie Spier, Havasupai ethnography (American Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers v 29, pt 3).
*Barbara and Edwin McKee and Joyce Herold, Havasupai Baskets and their Makers: 1930-1940 (Northland Press, 1975), pp 6-7.T
*Leslie Spier, Havasupai ethnography (American Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers v 29, pt 3).
*Barbara and Edwin McKee and Joyce Herold, Havasupai Baskets and their Makers: 1930-1940 (Northland Press, 1975), pp 6-7.