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| The Hyatt family began traveling to the Hopi reservation in northern Arizona in the late 1980s. |
Showing posts with label Art Native American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art Native American. Show all posts
Friday, August 1, 2014
Philbrook Museum of Art Announces Receipt of the Hyatt Collection of Hopi Art
ARTDAILY
OKLAHOMA--- Philbrook Museum of Art announced the important gift of 364 works of Hopi art, including katsinas, basketry and other media from Atlanta and Santa Fe-based collector, Wayne S. Hyatt. Featuring works by more than 160 artists, the Hyatt Collection both expands and strengthens the impressive survey of 20th and 21st century Native American art within the Philbrook holdings. Highlights of the collection include 25 katsinas (carved wooden figures of Hopi spiritual beings) by brothers Wilmer and Wilfred Kaye of the Badger/Butterfly Clan of Third Mesa. [link]
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Raelian Swastika Campaign Calculated to Stoke Controversy
RELIGION DISPATCHES
ARIZONA---This weekend a plane flew over Coney Island and the Rockaways towing a banner with a swastika and an ad for proswastika.org, a new initiative by the Raelians—a religious movement that believes humans were created by ancient extra-terrestrials, and whose insignia is a swastika inside of a hexagram. According to Raelian spokesperson Thomas Kaenzig, the swastika was brought to Earth millions of years ago by our alien forefathers, which is presumably why Raelians believe the symbol appears in cultures all over the world. This weekend marked the end of “International Swastika Rehabilitation Week,” part of an attempt to reclaim the symbol from its Nazi associations which also featured street activism in Las Vegas. [link]
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| History of the Swastika in world religions |
Monday, June 30, 2014
Despite Legal Challenges, Sale of Hopi Religious Artifacts Continues in France
THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Ton Mashberg
FRANCE---Prompted by another large sale on Friday of American Indian religious items — the fourth such auction in the past 18 months — embassy officials invited an American judge, who is herself a member of the Hopi tribe, to explain to government officials, art dealers, academics and lawyers why treating spiritual objects as commodities is insulting and sacrilegious. The embassy’s efforts did not pay off last week despite two legal challenges to the auction, which included 29 vibrant Hopi spiritual headdresses and masklike items, known as Katsinam, that are treated as living entities by the tribe. [link]
By Ton Mashberg
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| A view of three Hopi masks from Arizona during a Paris auction in December 2013. |
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