• Results (978)
  • Search

Item Search

The item search helps you look through the thousands of items on the RRN and find exactly what you’re after. We’ve split the search into two parts, Results, and Search Filters. You’re in the results section right now. You can still perform “Quick searches” from the menu bar, but if you’re new to the RRN, click the Search tab above and use the exploratory search.

View Tutorial

Log In to see more items.

Finely Coiled Basketry Bowl or Plate with red patternes on interior43.201.291

Anonymous gift in memory of Dr. Harlow Brooks

Culture
Native American
Material
fibre and silk
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Coiled Basketry Bowl with Figures and Animal Designs43.201.305

Anonymous gift in memory of Dr. Harlow Brooks

Culture
Yokuts
Material
fibre
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Basketry Plaque, Coiled60.1/7092
Basketry Mat, Small60.1/5448
Basketry Bag36.499

Gift of Frederic B. Pratt

Culture
“Wasco/Wishram” ?
Material
plant fibre, hide and hair
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Basketry Hat05.588.7528

Woven basketry hat that women would wear.

Culture
Yurok
Material
fibre
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Basketry Hat05.588.7464

The Hupa basketry hat (05.588.7464) is on the left in photograph and the Yurok basketry hat (05.588.7515) is on the right. When these hats were collected in 1905 they were treasured items of Hupa women and they remain so today. This basketry hat was collected by Stewart Culin directly from the weaver, Mary, when he saw it in her home.

Culture
Hupa
Material
fibre
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Twined Basketry Hat30.1453

Gift of Charlotte Elizabeth Dudley

Culture
Yurok
Material
fibre and woodwardia fern
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Basketry Teapot with Lid1994.185a-b

This woven teapot is missing the knob from it's lid. It is an excelent example of the creativity of weavers early in the 20th century to make objects aimed at a tourist and collectors' market as the teapot was made to appeal to non-Native buyers.

Culture
Tlingit
Material
spruce root, grass and dye
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record
Basketry Vessel72.5.2

Coiled vessel of slightly elongated globular form and woven in shades of brown with arrowhead and grain motifs depicting "Hunting in the Harvest Time". There are twenty-nine stitches to the inch. This is called a degikup basket a larger basket that curves towards the top and totally covered by the design a spherical, non-utilitarian basket produced by the technique of coiling.- and totally covered by the design a style Dat So La Lee (Louisa Keyser) invented. The primary basketry material is willow (Salix spp.), which is used to create the rods (warp) and the threads (weft). Bracken fern (Pteris aquilinium) and red bud (Cercis occidentalis) are the two primary materials used for the red and black decorative elements; both are processed into thread, which is spliced into the willow threads to create patterns on the light willow background. The three-rod technique, the form used originally and predominantly by the weavers of this period for the degikup, uses three willow stems to form the coils, which are curved along the horizontal plane and then sewn together with thread to create vertical height. Later artists switched to a one-rod technique, which produces a basket of somewhat less sculptural depth. The one-rod technique is less difficult and time intensive to produce, although not easy or quick by any means. The switch in styles reflected a response to the demands of the market. The provenance on this basket is definite (see provenance section). It is done in a style used for her major works between 1898 and 1916, involving a round shape, fine stitching (around 30 stitches per inch and either scattered or vertically arranged patterns of small design units. The arrow like forms are ripe grain, ripe harvest. the points on the end are arrow points for hunting.

Material
willow, bracken fern and red bud
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
View Item Record