-40%

"Angwusnasomtaqa - Crow Mother" Katsina - Gerry Quotskuyva - Hopi - MINT, NEW

$ 501.6

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Tribal Affiliation: Hopi
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Modified Item: No
  • Handmade: Yes
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Artisan: Gerry Quotskuyva
  • Culture: Native American: US
  • Provenance: Ownership History Available
  • Condition: New

    Description

    Hopi "
    Angwusnasomtaqa - Crow Mother
    " Katsina Doll - Native American Artist
    Gerry Quotskuyva
    Condition is MINT, NEW.
    Figure was purchased new in AZ and stored in enclosed display, in a smoke and pet-free home.
    Figure is 8.5" tall and 4.5" wide
    (headdress)Hand-carved and painted cottonwood root.
    Signed by the artist and dated at bottom (2008).
    Exquisite, mint condition katsina doll, kept in private home collection.
    Gorgeous vibrant colors. No dings,. wear, fading, or defects.
    About the Artist
    Gerry’s remarkable style has been nationally recognized on a public television series titled “Living in Balance on Shatki-Hill” which featured entertainers, healers and artists in the Sedona area. His work has also been featured in the books “Art of the Hopi” by Jerry and Lois Jacka, “Katsina” edited by Zena Pearlstone, and “Ancestral Echoes” a 10 year retrospective published in conjunction with his solo exhibit also titled “Ancestral Echoes”.
    Some of his pieces have been selected to adorn art show posters including the Hopi Tu-Tsootsvolla show in Sedona and the West Valley Invitational Native American Arts Festival in Litchfield Park. Gerry has garnered numerous awards for his carvings and paintings from museum shows including the Heard Museum, Arizona State Museum, Museum of Northern Arizona, Sharlot Hall Museum, Eiteljorg Museum in Indianapolis and Santa Fe Indian Market.
    His work was also showcased at the group exhibits “From the Earth” at the American Indian ContemporaryArts Gallery in San Francisco, “Art of the Mesas” at Tubac Center Of the Arts, and “Contemporary Katsinam”, a nine-month exhibit at UCLA’s Fowler Museum in Los Angeles.​
    Tohono Chul Park in Tucson hosted Gerry’s first, and highly successful, one-man exhibit titled “Contemporary Fragments” in the Spring of 2002. His second solo exhibit, "Ancestral Echoes”, ran from Sept. thru Oct. 2004 at Nichols Gallery on the Pitzer College campus in Claremont, CA.