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Tsimshian Native American carved wood raven mask, 1950-2000

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Native American ash basket with carved handle, 1880-1910
Located in Kenilworth, IL
19th century Native American hand woven square based ash basket with a hand carved clothes pin hinged loop handle. The upper rim of the basket is captured by a round double ash splin...
Category

Antique 19th Century American Decorative Baskets

Materials

Ash

Native American carved loop handle splint ash basket, 1900-1920
Located in Kenilworth, IL
Native American splint ash basket with carved and bent fixed loop handle which has been flattened at the apex. The rim of the basket is comprised of two 3/8" splints which capture th...
Category

Early 20th Century American Decorative Baskets

Materials

Ash

Kahana Traders hand carved monkeypod wood bowl, 1950-55
Located in Kenilworth, IL
Hand turned & carved eight lobe bowl of native Hawaiian monkeypod wood. The bowl features a carved rim of eight tapered edge scollops on a flat based bowl. Labeled on the underfoot:...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Decorative Bowls

Materials

Wood

Hand carved bowl of figured monkey pod wood, 1950
Located in Kenilworth, IL
Turned and hand carved five lobe bowl from a single piece of figured monkey pod wood. Hawaii, circa 1950.
Category

Mid-20th Century Hawaiian Decorative Bowls

Materials

Wood

American Impressionist landscape study, 1950's
Located in Kenilworth, IL
Unsigned oil on canvas California plein-air Impressionist landscape study of a California cypress tree on the fence line of a field. The palette is ...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Chinese carved Cinnabar plate, c. 1950
Located in Kenilworth, IL
Chinese Republic Period carved cinnabar export cabinet plate with scalloped brass rim and brass ring foot. The central landscape scene is of a pavilion on a lake with mountains in th...
Category

Mid-20th Century Chinese Decorative Dishes and Vide-Poche

Materials

Brass

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Located in Studio City, CA
A fantastic and somewhat playful mask by the Yup'ik (Yupik) aboriginal, indigenous people of South-Western & South Central Alaska. The Yup'ik people, who are related to the Inuit peoples, have a long history of ceremonial mask making. Yup'ik masks were originally and specifically designed by Shamans and made to be worn by these spiritual leaders in Winter tribal dances and sacred ceremonies. Traditionally, the masks were destroyed or discarded after use in these ceremonies. Very few of these masks survived. After Christian contact in the late 19th century, masked dancing was suppressed and the tradition all but died out. As more outsiders settled in Alaska at the turn of the century, masks were made by the Yup'ik people to sell or trade for necessary goods. It is likely that this mask was created some years later for this purpose. In the 20th century, Yup'ik mask had a profound influence on many renowned surrealist artists including, Max Ernst, Joan Miro, Leonora Carrington, Victor Brauner, and most notably Andre Breton who was an avid collector of Yup'ik masks. This fantastic anthropomorphic mask is carved of lighter wood, hand painted and decorated with pigment, and held together with natural fiber. The mask seems to represent some sort of smiling, benevolent spirit or character with its four eyes, bird beak, and cat-like ears. The mask is from a French collection. We were told that this mask, as well as others in the collection we have listed, was acquired originally in the 1950s-1960s in Alaska and the Yukon territory in Canada but as we have no way to verify or authenticate this. Please note we are listing the masks as decorative and not as actual tribal artifacts...
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Yupik Yup'ik Native American Alaska Carved Polychrome Wood Anthropomorphic Mask
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A fantastic and somewhat grotesquely strange mask by the Yup'ik (Yupik) aboriginal, indigenous people of South-Western & South Central Alaska. The Yup'ik people, who are related to t...
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20th Century American Masks

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Yupik Yup'ik Native American Alaska Polychrome Wood Anthropomorphic Spirit Mask
Located in Studio City, CA
A beautiful, somewhat benevolent mask by the Yup'ik (Yupik) aboriginal, indigenous people of South-Western & South Central Alaska. The Yup'ik people, who are related to the Inuit peoples, have a long history of ceremonial mask making. Yup'ik masks were originally and specifically designed by Shamans and made to be worn by these spiritual leaders in Winter tribal dances and sacred ceremonies. Traditionally, the masks were destroyed or discarded after use in these ceremonies. Very few of these masks survived. After Christian contact in the late 19th century, masked dancing was suppressed and the tradition all but died out. As more outsiders settled in Alaska at the turn of the century, masks were made by the Yup'ik people to sell or trade for necessary goods. It is likely that this mask was created some years later for this purpose. In the 20th century, Yup'ik mask had a profound influence on many renowned surrealist artists including, Max Ernst, Joan Miro, Leonora Carrington, Victor Brauner, and most notably Andre Breton who was an avid collector of Yup'ik masks. This fantastic anthropomorphic mask is carved of lighter wood and hand painted/ decorated with pigment. The mask seems to represent some sort of smiling, benevolent spirit or character. The mask is from a French collection. We were told that this mask, as well as others in the collection we have listed, was acquired originally in the 1950s-1960s in Alaska and the Yukon territory in Canada but as we have no way to verify or authenticate this. Please note we are listing the masks as decorative and not as actual tribal artifacts...
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Yupik Yup'ik Native American Alaska Polychrome Wood Anthropomorphic Spirit Mask
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Yupik Yup'ik Native American Alaska Polychrome Wood Anthropomorphic Spirit Mask
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20th Century American Masks

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Antique Carved Wood Mask
Located in Vienna, AT
Carved Wood Mask, African Art
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