Created as an homage to my desert ancestors, I focus on the historical significance of Indigenous southwestern tribal adornment culture and the perpetuation of those adornment practices perpetuated into the 21st century. In honor of my Navajo & Hopi Pueblo People & my ancestral matriarchs, and male relatives who adorned themselves with elements of the earth. Be Matriarch. Hózhó Nashá- Beauty all Around. Venaya Yazzie
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Sacred Mountains.song.
It's Tuesday so I am sharing one of my favorite songs. This one is called "Sacred Mountains" and was written and performed by Sharon Burch. Enjoy!
Diné Masání.Adorned.
Dine' elder at local Navajo market. |
Most Saturdays I can be found at one of the many local community markets such as the Shiprock Indian Market in Shiprock, New Mexico. Just a couple of those days ago I was at such a market and spotted this lovely Diné elder walking through the market. She was in full INDIGENOUS ADORNMENT with all her lovely Diné turquoise and silver jewelry.
She is wearing post-Long Walk Diné attire, a velvet-type shirt with collar and a three-tiered gathered skirt. She wears her hair in a bun and is ADORNED with several strings of coral beads as a necklace with a sting of turquoise tied at the end, this is called ja’atłó This masání is also ADORNED with a large, round silver and turquoise pendant.
I love to see our Diné elders ADORNED in their cultural attire. If you are fortunate to live in a community that has a large INDIGENOUS Native community, such as in the Four-Corners area, you will no doubt see such ADORNMENT practices in your local markets and even at Wal-Mart (the other Gathering of Nations)!!!
Monday, July 1, 2013
Song & Dance.Dine'.Regalia.
Navajo man and woman at Song and Dance. Window Rock, AZ Photograph by Venaya Yazzie |
After I graduated from the Institute of American Indian Arts I planted my roots again in my homelands in the San Juan Valley and the high desert lands of Huerfano, NM. This was in 1996. I was longing for the sage views and two rivers that run through the community and too I was in need of Dine' ways of dress, song, music and dance.
With the help of some female clan relatives I was soon dressed and ADORNED in the dancing regalia of the Dine' Song and Dance. I fell so in love with the ritual of INDIGENOUS Dine' ADORNMENT, and all that a participant must do. I soon learned most of the songs that the singers sang for the dances as I was frequentling a social dance nearly every weekend. It was a good time for me, it was my healing, it was my happiness.
I am so very thankful for such an experience as a young Dine' woman, I absorbed much and learned the traditional ways of acting, behaving and presenting myself.
About this photograph: I took this at the annual Navajo Nation Fair Song and Dance in Window Rock, AZ. The dance is a social dance that requires dancing with a partner and foremost it is a woman's choice dance where the woman chooses her male partner. The modern song and dance is adapted from the traditional social dances of the Enemyway Dine' ceremony called, N'daa. This part of the ritual is a time for the young people or single people to dance with the one person they may adore.
The dance also gives the Dine' individual a chance to dress and ADORN themselves to the nines. To put on their very best and present themselves to other dancers and possibly their sweethearts. As you will see in the picture above the elder Dine' couple is wearing matching outfits and the woman is wearing her hair in a traditional Dine' hair bun that is ADORNED with a Navajo design hair pin. She is also wearing Ke'intsaa, or her moccasins with dear skin wraps on her legs. They were good dancers too!
I am planning on attending a Song and Dance event in Monument Valley this week and will be taking some photographs to share.
I am planning on attending a Song and Dance event in Monument Valley this week and will be taking some photographs to share.
Be ADORNED!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)