The Women's Museum News
The Women's Museum Premieres 'Daughters of the Earth: Icons of Native American Women'
The exhibit includes 54 artifacts made by Native American women throughout history, focused on five iconic categories: beadwork, pottery, basketry, weaving and clothing. A few artifacts to note include:
* Vase, Maria Martinez: This black-toned vase was created by one of the most famous American Indian artists of the 20th century, potter Maria Martinez. She spent all of her 99 years in the place where she was born: San Ildefonso Pueblo in northern New Mexico. By the mid-1920s, her blackware was extremely popular outside the pueblo. * Lattice cradle, ca. 1920: Exquisitely beaded and lovingly prepared to receive an infant, the lattice cradle served as a \"house for the beginning of life.\" Infants on the Southern Plains spent much of their first two years in cradles, which were the only specialized equipment made for them. Cradles served as a crib, playpen, carriage, and highchair. * Lakota dress, ca. 1860: With its delicate drape and beadwork, this Native American wedding dress was actually worn by the wife of Chief Long Dog, a famous Lakota chief. It was collected in the late 1800s by a missionary couple, Mr. and Mrs. A.W. Macon on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota.
"We embrace the opportunity to celebrate these Native American women by showing their arts and crafts," said
Works featured in the exhibit are from the Museum of the Red River in
* Gallery Talk, June 14: Maury Ford, exhibits manager, The Women's Museum, will lead a guided tour of the special exhibit, focusing on the cultural and historical impact of the pieces. * Native American Workshops, July 12: Visitors can engage with the culture of Native American artisans in two sessions, \"Preserving My History\" and \"Oral History Story Circles.\"
A Smithsonian affiliate, The Women's Museum is the nation's only comprehensive women's history museum that chronicles the lives of American women through interactive exhibits. The Women's Museum is supported, in part, by the
SOURCE The Women's Museum
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