Sunday, April 17, 2011

Ogre Woman Kachina

Ogre Woman Kachina
8 x 10
oil on canvas
For this month's challenge I'm submitting this painting of a Hopi kachina. The word kachina has many meanings,  the dolls that were originally given to their children,  the masked dancers and the spirits that the dolls and dancers represent. The dolls were played with, of course, but they were a tool to teach the children about their religion. This is a painting I did of a fairly old Ogre Woman kachina, that I bought in a gallery in Albuquerque many years ago. The Ogre Woman comes to the Hopi mesas with other ogres bringing  corn for the girls to grind and traps for the boys to catch mice.  The children are told that the girls must grind the corn well, and the boys catch the mice that eat the Hopi's grain, by the time the Ogres return, or they will take the children away, to eat (hence the scary eyes and sharp teeth.) The purpose of this is to teach the children the roles they will have as adults, the boys as hunters and the girls as grinders of corn who can prepare food for their famalies.

3 comments:

  1. Great take on the tool challenge, Doug, my husband is from Arizona and he immediately began to tell me all about the Hopi doll, too. Very nice, this makes me want to go gallery hopping in the SouthWest!

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  2. Thank you Angela. I love New Mexico and Arizona. They are both great places for gallery hopping and finding rare and unusual treasures.

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  3. Very nice, Doug! And I love that you chose this as a tool for the challenge! Thanks for sharing the story, too. It really is interesting and I've learned something new. :)

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