File:Sioux Quilled Tobacco Bag.JPG

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Summary

Photographed by Pierre Fabre
Tobacco Bag Pierre L. Fabre collection, 2006.
John Painter collection, 2001.
Photographed and described in John W. Painter's
Window on the Past - Volume II
Sioux Quilled Tobacco Bag, sinew-sewn on hide with red, green, yellow, and purple quillwork forming flora and fauna, buffalo and caterpillar, images on recto. Verso decorated with horizontal red quilled lines. Lower panel composed of a wide span of quilled rawhide slats finishing with hide fringe and brass bells, quilled hide thong terminating with tin cones hang from opening, length (excluding fringe) 24".

As discussed by Colin Taylor in his paper "Wakanyan: Symbols of Power and Ritual of the Teton Sioux" (1987: 237-257), the cocoon is a symbol that evokes powerful imagery. As an emblem suggestive of several connotations, the most easily understood being spiritual and physical transformation, the cocoon also evokes recognition of the Sioux spirit Yumni, the whirlwind, responsible for the four directions of the world (Walker 1917 :85). Both the moth, which breaks free of its confining cocoon and the untamable wind, are viewed as spirits impossible to contain. Clark Wissler described in his 1907 field notes the "whirlwind bug," a creature with spiral grooves that creates small dust clouds along the ground. By this action, the cloud was thought to confuse the enemy and make him loose his senses (Wissler 1907: 119).

Similar iconography can be suggested in this tobacco bag. The striped S-shaped devices could suggest the "whirlwind bug," with alternating purple and yellow quillwork depicting the spiral grooves. The enclosed diamond above the buffalo's head may represent a cocoon, leading to the idea of the "Whirlwind Buffalo." As noted by Taylor, such a representation is shown...taken from [Gerrick] Mallery (1893: 604). Here a cocoon is clearly shown above the head of the bear and represents the whirlwind phenomena... The symbolism of the cocoon on the Crazy Horse shirt can thus be interpreted with some confidence (Taylor 1987: 252). The combination of bear and cocoon or buffalo and cocoon implicates the harnessing these animals' powers.

Photographed and described in A Window of the Past (Painter 2003: 38) and "Moths and the Plains Indian: Their Fascinating Connection" (Painter in Taylor and Dempsey 2005: 185-192).

Mallery, Garrick1893 "Picture Writing of the American Indians." Tenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington, D.C.

Taylor, Colin.1987 "Wakanyan: Symbols of Power and Ritual of the Teton Sioux." The Canadian Journal of Native Studies, VII, 2 (237-257).

Walker, James R.1917 "The Sun Dance and Other Ceremonies of the Oglala Division of the Teton Dakota." Anthopological Paper, Vol. 16, 2. American Museum of Natural History.

Wissler, Clark1902 "Field Notes on the Dakota Indians Collected on Museum Expedition." Ms. 1911 of the American Museum of Natural History, New York.

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Upload date User Bytes Dimensions Comment
2006-10-09 04:40:18 Frogiac 1325364 662×2229 Photographed by Pierre Fabre Tobacco Bag Pierre L. Fabre collection, 2006. John Painter collection, 2001. Photographed and described in John W. Painter's Window on the Past - Volume II Sioux Quilled Tobacco Bag, sinew-sewn on hide with red, green, yellow,

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current16:05, 21 March 2010Thumbnail for version as of 16:05, 21 March 2010662 × 2,229 (1.26 MB)Avicennasis{{BotMoveToCommons|en.wikipedia|year={{subst:CURRENTYEAR}}|month={{subst:CURRENTMONTHNAME}}|day={{subst:CURRENTDAY}}}} == Summary == Photographed by Pierre Fabre<br/>Tobacco Bag Pierre L. Fabre collection, 2006.<br/>John Painter collection, 2001.<br/>Phot