Special Value Offer: Diné (Navajo) Yei Pictorial Rug, circa 1940s- General Reservation [SOLD]
+ Add to my watchlist Forward to Friend
- Category: Navajo Textiles
- Origin: Diné of the Navajo Nation
- Medium: Native Wool - General Reservation
- Size: 5 feet-9 inches wide x 6 feet-10 inches long
- Item # C3009M SOLD
Special Value Offer: The estate from which this textile belongs has asked us to reduce the price from the original price of $8500 to a new price of only $5000.
Yeis are the Holy People of the Diné who are represented in sand paintings. They are both female and male and they are pictured with masks. Female Yei are represented with square or rectangular frontal masks and male are represented with a rounded mask that covers the whole head.
There has always been a strict rule that sand paintings be destroyed before sunset and never produced in permanent form. It is not surprising, then, that there was an uproar among the Diné when the first rugs were made depicting Yei Holy People. It is believed that the first ones were woven around 1880 although they were not generally seen until after 1900. By 1920, they were being woven throughout the Reservation.
This rug pictures four Yei figures surrounded by a Rainbow Guardian. The rug is woven of all natural brown wool for the field with dyed wool for the figures. It dates to the 1940s and is in excellent condition.
Provenance: from a New York City client
- Category: Navajo Textiles
- Origin: Diné of the Navajo Nation
- Medium: Native Wool - General Reservation
- Size: 5 feet-9 inches wide x 6 feet-10 inches long
- Item # C3009M SOLD
Click on image to view larger.