Pima Deep Bowl Basket [SOLD]

C3642A-basket.jpg

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Once Known Native American Weaver
  • Category: Bowls and Other Forms
  • Origin: Akimel O'odham, Pima
  • Medium: willow, devil’s claw
  • Size: 4-7/8” deep x 12-1/8” diameter
  • Item # C3642A
  • SOLD

The Akimel O´Odham River People (Pima) of Arizona were major Native American basket makers in the late 19th century, primarily making them for their own use.  At the turn of the century, basket weaving was being practiced in every home.  This continued into the early 20th century, at which time southwest Indian basketry became a collectible commodity.  The problem was that the collectors and dealers only paid $1.00 to $3.00 for a basket.  The women soon realized that it was not practical to spend weeks making a basket when they could pick cotton and earn $2.00 a day.  By the 1920s, basket weaving all but disappeared.  By 1960, they were not even making baskets for their own use.  They had, by then, substituted commercially made pots and pans for utilitarian use.

 

The utilitarian shapes they had made for use included trays, bowls, jars, and a few miscellaneous forms.  The trays were of graceful forms and could be shallow or deep.  The bowls were deep and large in most cases, but occasionally might be smaller.  Jars ranged from large storage vessels to small sizes for trinkets.  Among miscellaneous forms that were not too abundantly made were cups, plaques, wastebaskets, footed pieces, and miniatures.

 

This Pima basketry bowl is of average size with good depth.  It displays the fine stitching accomplished by many Pima basket makers and a design that is amazingly complicated and well executed.  It is a work of art.  The basket has a string attached to the back to facilitate hanging on a wall.  It may also be displayed on a flat surface. 

 

Condition: It is in excellent condition.

Recommended Reading: Indian Baskets of the Southwest by Clara Lee Tanner.  This book is currently not available from Adobe Gallery

Provenance:  from a family in Colorado

This bowl is of average size with good depth.  It displays the fine stitching accomplished by many Pima basket makers and a design that is amazingly complicated and well executed.  It is a work of art.

Once Known Native American Weaver
  • Category: Bowls and Other Forms
  • Origin: Akimel O'odham, Pima
  • Medium: willow, devil’s claw
  • Size: 4-7/8” deep x 12-1/8” diameter
  • Item # C3642A
  • SOLD

C3642A-basket.jpgC3642A-large.jpg Click on image to view larger.