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Pomo

Feathered Basket

Pomo, 1900-1932

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Pomo

Feathered Basket

Pomo, 1900-1932

Physical Qualities Willow, mallard neck feathers, clamshell beads, glass, 1 9/16 × 3 3/4 in. (3.9 × 9.5 cm.)
Credit Line Bequest of Florence Reese Winslow
Object Number 1953.220.B.223
These “jewel” baskets glimmer with objects of great worth. Clamshell disk beads, a traditional type of Pomo currency, are affixed to one basket. Both are covered with the feathers of various birds that historically shared their ancestral homeland with members of the Pomo tribe and feature in their myths. Indigenous women from California have been gathering vegetal materials like willow shoots to weave baskets for thousands of years. Pomo women are widely recognized as some of the most accomplished basket weavers in the world. While ornamented baskets were traditionally crafted as gifts, artists began making “art baskets” such as these for sale to white consumers around the turn of the 20th century.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by bequest, 1953; Florence Reese Winslow, Baraboo, WI.
Wurtzburger Gallery, The Baltimore Museum of Art, permanent collection rotation, July 1990-January 2006
Scott 10 Gallery, American Wing, The Baltimore Museum of Art, permanent collection rotation, June 2023-

Culture

Pomo

2000–2000

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