Posts Tagged ‘katsinas’

Sacred Clowns

Perhaps the most marvelous use of Native figures is the rendering of the clowns who appear during Pueblo Indian dances. These creatures play a role in the purpose and community meaning of the dances. The Koshare, represented in black and white stripes, grace modern jewelry, pottery and other craft and art forms. Mudheads, with their ugly ogre faces, are also popular creatures. Non-natives find them appealing and exotic. Certainly, their depiction provides local “color” without providing offense.

Shaping Native Spirits for Public Consumption

Among the most popular visual motifs for Southwestern Indian arts are the sacred spirits of the Pueblo Indians. These beings vary by cultural group. Most people are quickest to recognize Hopi katsinas (as opposed to the old spelling “kachina”). Hopi artists carve these figures from cottonwood, and have a wide range of beings that vary from powerful deities to sacred clowns. Zuni artists have contributed the sun face symbol for the sun god, and the popular images of the Rainbow and Knifewing spirits. These figures have been used for designs on jewelry, thus saving more significant spirits, like the Shalako, from depiction.

Fortunately, the Pueblo peoples are old veterans at this sort of compromise. The Rio Grande Pueblo smiths would make representations of their sun god in the form of the dragonfly, and wrought this symbol to resemble the Christian cross. To the padres who oversaw them during colonial times, they looked like the very epitome of a good Catholic in their cross necklaces.