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Navajo Yei Pictorial Rug, c. 1935, 62" x 89"

$ 2692.8

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Tribal Affiliation: Navajo
  • Artisan: Navajo
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Culture: Navajo
  • Origin: Navajo
  • Condition: Very good condition; please see full description for other details.

    Description

    Navajo Yei Pictorial Rug, c. 1935, 62" x 89"
    This rug is in very good condition.  There is some spotting, minor weft wear, and the corners are slightly curled.  There is a cloth sewn onto one side for hanging purposes.
    Acquired from a private collection in Arizona.  Includes a copy of an old appraisal stating the value as ,500 and the date as 1935.
    Please reference item T92339A-0120-004.
    Yei pattern rugs feature images of the Holy People drawn from ceremonial sand paintings but do not recreate an entire painting. The closely related Yeibechai rugs show Navajo dancers in the act of portraying Yeis in ceremonies. Typically, the Yeis are highly stylized figures with elongated bodies, short straight legs, and heads facing the viewer. Yebechais have somewhat more human proportions, usually face sideways, and often have legs bent in a dancing motion. The earliest Yei rugs usually included one or two large Yei figures oriented vertically, i.e. parallel with the warp. In some cases, small Yei images were included in rugs with geometric patterns or other pictorial elements. Though quite rare, these early types were made over a period of nearly four decades, falling out of favor by the 1930s. In the 1910s, a very small number of weavers made single figure type rugs which portrayed not the Navajo Yei, but rather Hopi Katsina figures with characteristic tableta headdresses.The more common types of Yei and Yeibechai rugs feature multiple figures oriented parallel with the weft threads so that the rug appears wider than long when the figures are upright. Two distinct styles emerged in the 1920s. Those made in the area of Shiprock, New Mexico tend to have light colored backgrounds with no border, and often use brightly colored commercial yarns. Yeis and Yeibechais made in the central part of the reservation, in northeastern Arizona, tend to have dark backgrounds with simple borders. They are more likely to incorporate natural wool colors and more subdued chemical shades. Yeis continue to be very popular with collectors and are now being made in nearly all parts of the reservation.
    Medicine Man Gallery has been in the Antique Native American art business since 1992.  We have one of the largest inventories of Antique Native American art for sale in the country, offering Navajo Rugs and Blankets, American Pueblo Pottery, Indian Baskets, Hopi Kachinas, Old Pawn Jewelry, Contemporary Native American Jewelry, and Native American Beadwork, as well as Ethnographic Art, Western Americana, Art of the West and Native American Art.  Before purchasing please feel free to contact us with any questions you may have about the condition of this item; we are happy to send additional images.