Tab Bag
CultureGreat Lakes, Ohio region
Dateca. 1800
MediumBlack-dyed native tanned leather, natural and dyed porcupine quills, metal cones, dyed animal hair, and silk ribbon
DimensionsOverall: 20 1/4 × 6 inches (51.44 × 15.24 cm)
Credit LinePurchase: Donald D. Jones Fund for American Indian Art
Object number2004.17
On View
Not on viewCollections
DescriptionDark brownish-black leather bag with rounded top and rectangular tabs at bottom, embroidered with porcupine quills and geometric and figurative designs. Paired humans, thunderbirds, and turtles are represented.Gallery LabelBlack-dyed deerskin bags embroidered with porcupine quills were created throughout the Eastern Woodlands, Great Lakes and Prairie regions. They were used as containers for objects and materials associated with sacred power, healing and ritual societies. This rare example depicts various spirit beings, or manitous, joined with abstract representations of supernatural power. Together they form a cosmological diagram—the visualization of a complex world alive with both visible and unseen forces. The manitous, represented as thunderbirds, turtles and humans, are conceived in perpetual conflict, a metaphor for the universal struggles inherent in the natural world, but their interaction also represents the essential balance formed within a cohesive universe. An early form originating prior to European contact, few bags of this type were produced after 1830.
Torrence, Gaylord, ed. Continuum: North American Native Art at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Kansas City: Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.
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