The Philbrook Museum of Art in Tulsa, has a basket collection, it’s called “Interwoven:Cherokee, Muscogee (Creek) and Yuchi ...
Cherokee rivercane baskets have been getting smaller. These days, an intricately woven basket might be only the diameter of an apple. Artisans have been making some baskets smaller to make the most of ...
Rather than using river cane or some other species of reed to make her baskets, Goshorn builds her baskets out of watercolor paper on which she has printed the texts of treaties between the Cherokee ...
Western North Carolina is renowned for its Appalachian art, and there is no artistry more indigenous to this area than the original handicrafts of the Eastern Cherokees. The Cherokee have lived in ...
New South Associates explains the cultural significance of basket weaving in Georgia. New South Associates explains the historical and cultural significance of basket weaving in Georgia and teaches ...
Lottie Queen Stamper teaching a basketry class at the Cherokee Training School, 1950; pictured, from left to right: Lois Rattler (Calonehuskie), Frances Bradley, Annie Queen, Lottie Queen Stamper, and ...
Levi West is a potter who begins with the ground itself — the earth. He has been researching sites around Cherokee towns where his ancestors would have harvested clay for pottery. But even when he ...
MADE IN CHEROKEE: Christy Long showcases her handcarved butternut bowl. There’s a cultural amnesia about what it means to be Native American, says Cherokee woodcarver Christy Long. “When you look at ...
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