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White Ogre Tihu (Katsina Figure)

White Ogre Tihu (Katsina Figure)

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Date
ca. 1900
Medium
Cottonwood, pigment, cotton cloth, tanned leather, and metal
Dimensions
H. 18 1/2 × W. 6 × D. 7 in. (47 × 15.2 × 17.8 cm)
Culture
Hopi, Native American
Department
The American Wing
Gallery
746
Location
746
Credit
The Charles and Valerie Diker Collection of Native American Art, Promised Gift of Charles and Valerie Diker

Description

Overview White Ogre Tihu (Katsina Figure) Hopi, Native American ca. 1900 On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 746 A katsina is a spirit being who serves as a cultural guide in Hopi and Zuni communities. Young girls often receive a tihu, or katsina doll, as a cherished gift. This tihu takes the form of the ogre Nata’aska, who visits Hopi villages to discourage bad behavior and to remind children of their responsibilities to their community. This figure carries a bone-cutting saw and is dressed in traditional regalia, including a wraparound kilt, a concha belt, and a brocaded hip sash. In the 1920s, Hopi and Zuni carvers began to carve katsina dolls to sell to tourists, as demand for Native American souvenirs grew steadily at the turn of the century. The movable arms and added, rather than painted, garments suggest this figure was likely made for such a market. View more