Hopi Pueblo Hahai-i Wuhti Kachina Doll [SOLD]

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Once Known Native American Carver

Hahai-i Wuhti is one of the more colorful of the Hopi Pueblo Katsinas.   She is present in many ceremonies—Salako, Powamu, Pachavu, Palȍlȍkongti, and even Soyoko.  Her personality is that of a sprightly Hopi grandmother. She may be found speaking in her shrill falsetto for the Nataskas (Ogres) on First Mesa.  She would be demanding meat for them, for, after all, they are her and Chaveyo’s children. Failing to get the kind or quantity of meat desired, she may be heard berating the inconsiderate, hard-hearted individuals and mutterying dire threats.

Again, she may be seen in the Salako extorting those giant bird-like katsinas through an elaborate ritual.  In yet another guise she appears in the Third Mesa Pachavu offering the children somiviki, a Hopi food, and when they reach for it she pours water on their heads.  This is not an idle act but one with ceremonial meanings.

And yet another time she will be seen as the wet nurse of the Water Serpents during the Puppet Dances.  Wherever she appears she is usually very vocal, an attribute not common among the other katsinas.

In addition to being the mother of the ogres, she is thought of as the mother of dogs and of katsinas.  

It is the tihu (flat katsina doll) of Hahai-i Wuhti, that is given to the very young Hopi babies and captive eagles.  Hahai-i Wuhti is always the first doll given to a newborn infant. When a Hopi restrains an eagle on the roof of his home, it is treated with honor. It would be given gifts of small baskets and gifts of Hahai-i Wuhti katsina dolls. Hahai-i Wuhti is a very important katsina in all the Hopi villages.


Condition: this Hopi Pueblo Hahai-i Wuhti Kachina Doll ia in good condition with minor cracks in the wood

Provenance: from the extensive collection of a family formerly from Oklahoma

Recommended Reading:  Kachinas - a Hopi Artist’s Documentary by Barton Wright with original paintings by Cliff Bahnimptewa

Reltative Links: Hopi Pueblo, Katsina Dolls

Close up view of the Katsina face.