Quiver
Item number Ni8 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number Ni8 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Animal hide rolled and stitched with green thread with small flap of hide folded over at top. Quiver does not completely encase the ten ceremonial arrows it contains. Arrows have notched bamboo ends painted with red and blue bands or dots and the bamboo ends are fitted over blunt narrow wooden shafts and affixed with thread and glue. Some arrows have feathers bound to bamboo with thread.
Might be associated with a ceremony involving the the ritual hunting and killing of deer.
contemporary; tourist art; ritual
The Wixáritari are known to the larger world as the Huichol, however that is not the name they use to refer to themselves.
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contemporary; tourist art; ritual
Might be associated with a ceremony involving the the ritual hunting and killing of deer.
Animal hide rolled and stitched with green thread with small flap of hide folded over at top. Quiver does not completely encase the ten ceremonial arrows it contains. Arrows have notched bamboo ends painted with red and blue bands or dots and the bamboo ends are fitted over blunt narrow wooden shafts and affixed with thread and glue. Some arrows have feathers bound to bamboo with thread.
The Wixáritari are known to the larger world as the Huichol, however that is not the name they use to refer to themselves.
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