Adobe Gallery Blog
Hopi Pueblo Katsina - Kachina Doll with Bird Beak - 26003
Some of the older Hopi men had difficulty reconciling making traditional katsina dolls to be sold to tourists because of conflicts with the traditional meaning of the dolls to the Hopi people. Katsina dolls were made as gifts from the Katsinam to the Hopi females as a means of including them in the Katsinam ceremonies that were practiced by the Hopi men. To some of the older men, carving the dolls for sale was degrading and perhaps sacrilegious to their meaning. Wilson Tawaquaptewa was one of the most famous carvers with such feelings.
To prevent defying their religious beliefs in the Katsina culture, yet, to be able to participate in the money-making business of selling katsina dolls to tourists, some of these men made dolls that did not accurately reflect the true katsinas. The carvings looked like authentic katsinas but were not accurate in the portrayal of a specific katsina. They may have had features of several katsinas combined to appear to reflect an existing katsina but did not violate their belief in the meaning of true katsinas.
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