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Kachina Doll (Paiyatemu)03.325.4631

Wooden kachina doll was identified as Chilchi by Stewart Culin however this kachina's mask and dress does not correspond to the kachina with the closest name, Chilili-and Chilili never carries or plays a flute. It is probably Paiyatemu, a kachina representing one of four youths who has two roles. One is during the corn grinding and fertility rituals in the Summer Dance series. When four maidens take their places to dance they play this type of flute as the maidens' song begins. Ribbons represent flowers. When he arrives with a different kachina, Hekshiva Shelowa, his body is black which may be why this kachina has black arms. He represents prayers and the return of good crops. He is also thought to be a powerful figure, an original medicine man. This elaborately dressed doll has a feather headdress and a fringed buckskin collar with a Maltese cross painted on the front. He has a bustle with ribbons on his back and carries a song flute and rattle.

Culture
She-we-na
Material
wood, pigment, horse hair, feather, wool, hide, cotton, tin and ribbon
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Dancing Shoes05.588.7175a-b

The blue color of these high top shoes indicates they may have been worn by Kachina Dancers. The red fringe was colored by dye made from alder bark or rubbed iron oxide. Calcium carbonate might have created the blue color. A band of porcupine quills covers the heels.

Culture
Hopi Pueblo
Material
deer hide, pigment, sinew, porcupine quill, horse hair and wool
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Kachina Doll (Thlamatona)03.325.4620

This kachina is wearing a cotton cloth skirt, armbands, and short moccasins. He has his entire chest painted. Wearing an elaborate headdress.

Culture
She-we-na
Material
wood, pigment, hair, feather, yarn and cotton cloth
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Kachina Doll (Ainshi Koko)07.467.8440

Bear kachina doll with cotton kilt and sash with fringe. Arms attached to torso with nails. Mouth slightly ajar; teeth carved into jaw. Fur attached to top of head with resinous material.

Culture
She-we-na
Material
wood, pigment, cotton, hair, hide, yucca and resinous material
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Split Horn Headdress11.694.9050

The front of the headdress has a beaded headband in blue and white. From under the headband, trailing down the back is dyed red horse hair. Two long horns (beef horns) are on either side. A roach of bird skin and feathers is fastened to center of horsehair trailer. Four bands of dyed feathers are attached to a red wool trailer faced with cotton fabric that hangs down the back of the headdress. According to Sean Standing Bear 10/24/2000) the small concentric beaded circles on either side of the headdress are 'eyeballs.'

Culture
Osage
Material
horn, horse hair, rooster feather, hawk birdskin, hide, glass bead, fur, silk, wool, cotton and sinew
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Shirt for Chief's War Dress50.67.1a

Tailored as an "over-the-head" garment, the shirt is constructed from four pieces of skin (front, back and two sleeves). It is laced together from elbow to wrist on both sides, but the triangular bib is sewn on. Lazy stitch beadwork has been used on the bib and shoulders. Both the front and the back of the shirt are elaborately painted which is unusual. The upper quadrant on the proper left side of the shirt is stained a dark grayish brown, the upper right is smudged with reddish stain. The painted designs on these colored areas probably represent a tally related to war exploits. On the brownish area, sixteen linear objects, possibly stylized rifles, have been drawn in paint, one above the other. On the right, in the area partially stained in red, are seventeen linear designs in brown, bifurcated on the right side that may represent horse quirts. The shirt is also painted on the back with five geometric shapes that almost certainly represent people (torsos are triangular with round heads, but facial features are not indicated). Designs that probably represent horse tracks are on the right lower sleeve in front and on the reverse on the right shoulder. The lower left sleeve at the wrist is decorated with evenly spaced rows of short slashes. The beads used to decorate the shirt are almost entirely large blue and white pony beads, although there are some tube beads on the epaulets and along the sleeve. The porcupine quills are dyed mainly orange and white. The two rosettes on the chest are quilled with brown fern stems and white porcupine quills and are also appliquéd with white pony beads. There are some remnants of white fur on the tips of the fringe at the hip of the shirt. One feather was attached to fringe. Hair locks are made partly of human hair and partly of horsehair dyed blue-green with a few light colored hairs interspersed among the locks. The locks are wrapped at the base with porcupine quills. This shirt is part of an outfit with leggings 50.67.1b, c.

Culture
Sioux, Yanktonai and Nakota
Material
pony bead, porcupine quill, buckskin, maidenhair fern stem, human hair, horse hair, dye and feather
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Rattle2010-37/58

The paint is green, red, and black.

Culture
Northwest Coast
Material
wood, paint and hair
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Mask1884.114.111

item is from the Augustus Henry Lane Fox Pitt Rivers founding collection

Culture
Haida ? or Nuxalk ?
Material
wood, pigment, animal fur skin, caribou hair animal ?, animal hide skin, animal sinew and cotton textile plant
Made in
Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada ? or Bella Coola, British Columbia, Canada ?
Holding Institution
Pitt Rivers Museum
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Apron1884.56.82

item is from the Augustus Henry Lane Fox Pitt Rivers founding collection

Culture
Haida ?, Tlingit ? or Tsimshian ?
Material
animal leather skin, goat hair yarn animal, deer hoof animal, puffin beak bird and cedar wood plant
Made in
British Columbia, Canada ? or Alaska, USA ?
Holding Institution
Pitt Rivers Museum
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Paint-brush1891.49.78

Wooden paintbrush with animal hair bristles. [CAK 11/05/2010]

Culture
Haida
Material
cedar wood plant, cedar bark, sinew ? and animal hair
Made in
British Columbia Haida Gwaii NW Coast, Canada
Holding Institution
Pitt Rivers Museum
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