Hopi Tasavu Clown in Jest of the Navajo [SOLD]
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- Category: Traditional
- Origin: Hopi Pueblo, Hopituh Shi-nu-mu
- Medium: cottonwood, paint, fabric, rope
- Size: 12” tall
- Item # C3383R SOLD
There is a category of Hopi Clowns that has been named Piptuyakyamu. They represent a group of Hopi men who band together to perform impromptu skits for the amusement of the people. They are not sacred clowns, as are the Koosa, nor are they equivalent to the Koyemsi (Mud Heads). They do not have a prescribed appearance except for painting their faces white, and may appear in any dress of choice. They dress according to the skit being performed. Their antics are usually something related to happenings at the pueblo. Their skits are usually presented in the most obscene manner possible.
Accompanying the Piptuyakyamu are other personages that have been named Quasi Clowns because no other name fits their demeanor. One of these is the Tasavu or Navajo Clown. Unlike the Piptuyakyamu, who always appear in different costumes, the Tasavu always appears in the same dress, that imitating a Navajo. It is in this personage that this clown mocks and makes fun of their neighbor, the Navajo.
This carving of a Tasavu Clown presents the Navajo wearing nothing but a loin cloth cinched around his waist with a leather belt painted to resemble a concha belt. Over his left shoulder is a rope and he holds a leather whip in his right hand. He wears a red bandana on his head and has huge turquoise earrings.
Condition: original condition
Provenance: from the estate of Tom Mittler, a former resident of Michigan and Santa Fe
Recommended Reading: Hopi Katsina: 1,600 Artist Biographies by Gregory Schaaf
- Category: Traditional
- Origin: Hopi Pueblo, Hopituh Shi-nu-mu
- Medium: cottonwood, paint, fabric, rope
- Size: 12” tall
- Item # C3383R SOLD
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