Diné (Navajo)
Eye Dazzler Blanket
1884-1894
Scroll
Diné (Navajo)
Eye Dazzler Blanket
1884-1894
Physical Qualities
Wool weft, cotton warp, 87 × 63 in. (221 × 160 cm.)
Credit Line
Gift of Nancy L. Dorman and Stanley Mazaroff, Baltimore
Object Number
2021.221
A Diné (Navajo) weaver made this vibrant textile, known as an “eye dazzler” for its capacity to create optical illusions. The stair-stepped concentric diamond pattern is known as serrate (Spanish for “notched”).
The 1882 arrival of the railroad to Diné lands in the southwestern United States ushered in a period of tremendous change. Many trading posts opened along the railroad route, and the owners of such establishments encouraged Diné weavers to abandon traditional aesthetics and instead produce work whose patterns, colors, and sizes appealed to Euro-American buyers. Synthetically dyed commercial yarns, as seen in this eye dazzler,
yielded brighter colors than handspun and naturally dyed yarns. Reflecting this moment of artistic experimentation with a new fiber, these vivid colors also heighten the contrast and sense of movement generated by the textile’s animated design.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 2021; Nancy Dorman and Stanley Mazaroff by purchase, 1982; Mudd-Carr Gallery, Sante Fe, New Mexico
Collection rotation, American Wing, Scott 3 Gallery, Baltimore Museum of Art, June 26, 2024-March 2, 2025