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Coiled Basket (Hok-in)03.325.3595

Museum Expedition 1903, Museum Collection Fund

Culture
Paiute and San Juan Southern
Material
fibre
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Coiled Globular Basket08.491.8639

Museum Expedition 1908, Museum Collection Fund

Material
willow, sedge root and redbud bark
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Figure of Coiled Serpent Forming a Cylinder48.22.2

By exchange

Culture
Aztec
Material
volcanic stone
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Coiled Presentation Bowl06.331.8050

Coiled tan basket with brown, triangle-like designs. The bark design elements are woven in briar root, which has limited distribution in California. While it is a difficult material to trim and work with it is a favorite material of Mary Azbil and she used it especially on baskets she made for family and friends. The design layout requires a great deal of planning and patience. Presentation baskets are invariably fancier than everyday containers and this basket appears to have never been used for food.

Material
sedge root, briar root and willow shoot
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Coiled Cooking Basket (Bush-ka) with "Valley-Quail Topknot" (Shu-shu) and "Grape Leaves" (Ba-hu) Patterns08.491.8679

08.491.8679 basket is on the left. This basket has the plume or top-know motif on a cooking basket (bush-ka). These types of baskets with one or two patterns are found in the Maidu community of Mikchopdo at Chico CA. The design is valley quail and grape leaves (the diamonds).The quail pattern is weaver Wilson's best known basket design and can appear in different patterns: some called mountain quail and some, such as seen here, the more common valley quail, where the plume is curved and thick.

Material
sedge root, briar root and willow shoot ?
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Coiled Basket Bowl43.201.265

This woven basket with an abstracted design had one tear in the side. Possibly Shoshone in use at least.

Culture
Shoshone
Material
fibre and dye
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Coiled Dish-shaped Basket with Geometric Decorations50.67.122

Henry L. Batterman Fund and the Frank Sherman Benson Fund

Culture
Apache
Material
plant fibre
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Coiled Cooking Basket (Bush-ku) with mountain quail topknot design (wash-wash-ka)08.491.8683

08.491.8983 basket is on the right. (See also 08.491.8679 description.) The cooking basket (bush-ka) has the design of the mountain-quail top-knot. This design was Wilson's best known design. The mountain-quail has a very long, straight top knot. Author Sally Bates suggests that this design may have been favored as the weaver's name, Oymutnee, meant "the sound made by a quail." Baskets such as this one seem to be characteristic of the Maidu community of Mikchopedo at Chico, CA.

Material
sedge root, redbud and willow shoot ?
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Girl's Coiled Dowry or Puberty Basket (kol-chu or ti-ri-bu-ku)07.467.8308

This is a conical shaped basket with a stepped flag design in brown on natural fiber colored background. The shells and feathers are fastened to the exterior and extend out from basket. Although called a puberty basket it is thought that this basket was not necessarily used for puberty ceremonial. At the time it was collected it was thought that ceremony no longer was being practiced so such baskets were no longer being made for traditional practice. While it may have been intended for such, there is no physical evidence that it was ever used to hold water, and it is more likely that it was made for sale, an aestheticized version of a traditional form.

Material
willow, sedge root, bulrush root, acorn woodpecker scalp feather, california valley quail topknot feather, oilivella biplicata shell and cotton string
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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