Kachina Figure Item Number: D4.114 from the MOA: University of British Columbia

Description

Standing Kachina figure with fanned feathers attached at back of head. Figure has a blue face with geometric features, orange ears, pink, blue and yellow torso with orange sash, white skirt with black geometric motif border and orange, blue and black sash around waist, and orange feet with a band of blue on one leg, and a band of yellow on the other.

History Of Use

The Hopi and many of the Pueblos of the American Southwest retain a belief in Katsinam or Kachina, supernatural spirits that control conditions, beings and actions in the world of the living. The Katsinam and the dead live in a parallel world, emerging into the world of the living at set times between mid-December and mid-July to assist people to maintain a harmoniously balanced cosmos. Katsinam figures show the principal characteristic of each of the spirits taking part in the annual round of masquerades and dances that reaffirm the links between living communities and the spirits. The figures, seen more as toys, are given to girls by dancers during the ceremonies.

Iconographic Meaning

Figure represents Qaletaqa, the warrior katsina.