-40%

Navajo Chinle Rug, c. 1930, 71" x 48"

$ 1000.56

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Artisan: Navajo
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Tribal Affiliation: Navajo
  • Origin: Navajo
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Condition: Used

    Description

    c. 1930 Navajo Chinle Rug, 71" x 48"
    This weaving has been outfitted with a removable sleeve for hanging display.
    Please reference item T91993A-1213-001.
    Beginning in the 1920s, weavers and traders developed several new regional styles based on a revival of Transitional Period banded patterns and the predominant use of vegetal dyes. The impetus behind this trend came primarily from Anglo collectors, traders, and government agencies that had a sincere desire to upgrade the quality of Navajo weaving and return to traditional, pre-rug patterns. The resulting rugs were not literal copies of older pieces, but were creative variations on banded designs using a wide palette of newly developed natural dye colors, as well as new, subtly colored chemical dyes. Mary Cabot Wheelwright, founder of the Wheelwright Museum in Santa Fe, probably started the vegetal revival by providing weavers around Chinle, Arizona with the new dyes and sketches of old weavings. Chinle Revival rugs typically feature bands of repeating geometric motifs alternated with plain or striped bands of contrasting colors. Common colors for Chinle rugs include yellow, gold, brown, tan, terra cotta, soft pink and other earth tones, as well as natural wool colors ranging from white to black. Weavers in the area south of Chinle, around Nazlini, developed a variation on the Chinle type which often used stylized plant motifs in place of the repeating geometrics.
    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 and Art of the West.
    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.