A
Navajo wedding basket c.1940 with traces of cornmeal in the weaving and
cotton fiber at center. Weft is natural and dyed sumac. This basket is in good condition with 3 missing stitches. Size 11" diameter x 1 3/4" height.
The “Navajo wedding basket”
is an important vessel. Not only used in wedding ceremonies, but many other
types of ceremonials such as, girls’ puberty rites, and traditional healing
ceremonies.
Traditional
ceremonial Navajo baskets always include an open pathway from the center to the
periphery. Navajo basket-weavers refer to the opening in the basket’s design as
“the way out.” It represents both the Navajo people’s exit from one world and
reemergence to the next, as well as the ever-forward progression of individual
human thought. In ceremonial practice, the gap in the basket’s design is always
oriented to the east, the direction of sunrise, new beginnings and new life.
During ceremonials the basket is filled with the appropriate corn meal
mixture--from which each participant takes a portion to eat. Baskets that have
traces of cornmeal in the weaving are very desirable, as they have been
“blessed” with ritual use.
All Navajo baskets employ
the coil method of weaving, using three-leaf sumac.