Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Autumn change and blessings

Autumn leaves in Eastern Navajo Nation, NM
Photo by Venaya Yazzie

Blessings to you!

I would like to extend my gratitude to you all who view my blog. I am thankful for your comments and interest in Indigenous Adornment in the American Southwest. I too, am thankful for the change of seasons, and to witness the ways in which the Earth is 'adorned' in new colors as the high desert southwest flora and fauna make their change.

At this time of season, many of the Navajo and Pueblo dances and ceremonial life is in full effect, therefore, many of the Indigenous People are indeed 'adorned' in their finest traditional jewelry.

We are blessed to be a part of this season, this journey and ability to be inspired by Indigenous southwest culture. We are rich indeed!



Article about Turquoise and the Indigenous

Pueblo Mosaic Jewelry
Photo: Museum of New Mexico

It is a rare thing when I find a truly authentic article that touches to the core of the Indigenous artist, and their jewelry creations. I found this article via the Internet and was pleased that the Museum of New Mexico discusses the rich, ancient knowledge of why, where, when and how many of the desert's Indigenous people wear turquoise. As Indigenous peoples of the 21st century, many of us wear turquoise for spiritual reasons. Blessings.


Santa Fe features Turquoise, Water, Sky: The Stone and Its Meaning
March 20, 2014
Museum of New Mexico

If you love Turquoise, make your way to Santa Fe for a new exhibit. The Turquoise, Water, Sky: The Stone and Its Meaning exhibit opens at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture on April 13, 2014, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and will run through March 2016. The exhibit showcases the museum’s ample collection of southwestern jewelry and addresses all aspects of the stone.

In the Southwest, people have used turquoise to make jewelry and for ceremonial purposes for over a thousand years and may have traded it to the great population centers of Mexico. The Navajo, Zuni, Hopi, and Santo Domingo developed distinctive jewelry-making traditions over the past couple of centuries, producing world-renowned and highly desired objects. Turquoise, Water, Sky presents hundreds of necklaces, bracelets, belts, rings, earrings, silver boxes, and other objects illustrating how the stone was used and its deep significance to the people of the region.

Despite its close identification in the US with the Southwest, turquoise has long been esteemed in other parts of the world. Turquoise was one of the stones used in the gold funeral mask of King Tutankhamen in Ancient Egypt and it is prized by Iranians, the Chinese, Tibetans, Uzbeks, and by South American indigenous groups. The oldest turquoise mines in the world, operated for thousands of years, are in Iran. The word “turquoise” comes from the French name for a beautiful blue stone they thought came from Turkey, but was actually from Persia.

Additional information below:
The regions where turquoise is highly valued as a gem stone, the US Southwest, central and northern Mexico, Tibet, Andean South America, and Uzbekistan, are all arid regions. This is no coincidence as turquoise and its color symbolize water and sky and sometimes both.
The Zuni word for turquoise can be translated as “sky stone.” This link between turquoise and sky is true outside the Southwest, for example in Tibet, where the sky is sometimes called “the turquoise of Heaven.”
Turquoise’s stronger symbolism in the Southwest is to water, a scarce but essential resource. Turquoise has an almost poetic connection to water. It is formed in arid lands by infrequent precipitation flowing through host rock and depositing minerals and salts. It’s fitting that the resulting stone’s color echoes its origin.
Pueblo dances during the summer growing season are performed to ensure rain for crops with the dancers’ wearing turquoise regalia alluding to rain.
Southwestern turquoise has been mined for over a thousand years at various locations in Arizona, New Mexico, and Nevada.
Turquoise, the stone, ranges from white (also called “chalk”), to deep blue, pale blue, florescent yellow-green, deep green, and everything in between.
Turquoise is a soft stone and changes color as it is worn, becoming darker and greener. In many parts of the world it is believed that turquoise can absorb poisons and protect the wearer, or alternatively, that its color reflects the health of its wearer.
While the color of turquoise is important, the color and shape of the matrix, the veins of host rock that run through turquoise, contribute to its prestige and value.
Shell and turquoise are often used together. Both allude to water, one based on origin and the other on color with the pairing intensifying the water symbolism.
For the Navajo, turquoise is linked to protection and health. At birth, babies receive their first turquoise beads. The stone, in both whole and crushed form, is also included in puberty rites, marriage and initiation ceremonies, and in healing ceremonies and other rituals. With the stone so intertwined with every stage of Navajo life it is no accident that they are famed for their turquoise jewelry.
The Museum of Indian Arts and Culture is located on Museum Hill in Santa Fe, New Mexico. To find additional details and information on the exhibit and on all things Santa Fe, visit www.santafe.org.

Information courtesy: Santa Fe CVB

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Campitos and Mother-of-Pearl earrings

Handmade earrings by Venaya Yazzie
Photo by Venaya Yazzie
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Navajo coral necklace

Besides wearing a this fabulous six-string coral necklace, I am also adorned with a turquoise necklace that belongs to my maternal grandmother, shi'ma'sani. This coral necklace was strung my ma'sani, so it made in the 'ol style' fashion meaning she strung the necklace to hang in a longer line, and the beads are strung along the whole string.




Handmade wooden Navajo earrings

Hand-made wooden earrings made by Lino Footracer
Photo by Venaya Yazzie

I was able to find the work of Navajo jewelry artist Lino Footracer from Arizona via social media. I purchased this pair of earrings and I was not disappointed when they arrived via post mail delivery.



Navajo silver beads and pendant

Navajo silver beads and pendant.

Navajo made sterling silver beads and sandcasted pendant. All beads are hand-fashion by a Navajo silversmith, who made each bead in two-parts which are sautered together. Each bead is hollow, and are heirloom pieces that belonged to my great-grandmother.



Navajo / Hopi Cultural Adornment

Photo of 2014 Miss Navajo Nation McKeon Dempsey
Source: Instagram
As an avid user of Instagram I follow the current reigning Miss Navajo Nation, McKeon Dempsey.

This photograph was posted by her which depicts southwestern Hopi Pueblo and Navajo cultural adornment in the 21st century. The Hopi girls are wearing white, red and black woven mantas with woven sash belts, turquoise and silver jewelry.  The three Pueblo girls are wearing their hair in traditional women's Hopi hair style.

Miss Navajo Nation McKeon is adorned in post-Long Walk era attire via her velvet shirt and 3-tiered skirt and woven sash belt. She also wears her silver and turquoise jewelry including silver concho belt and Navajo squash blossom necklace.

This picture is a great depiction of modern cultural women's adornment of the Hopi and Navajo.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Home.

Huerfano Peak - Mesa, NM on Eastern Dine' reseravation
Photo by Venaya Yazzie
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 2014

Growing up this view was my safety. my family is here, I am rooted in this high desert full of safe oceans and waving arms of rabbitbrush. My identity concerns the voice of northwestern New Mexico, my love moves upon the skies of eastern region of the Navajo Nation reservation. This is home.