Hopi Corn Maiden Kachina
The Hopi Maiden Kachina is the embodiment of corn: she is clothed in a traditional homespun manta, wears her hair styled in “butterfly whorls” and has a long feather “beard” symbolizing rain. Made of cottonwood, paint, feathers, and string, circa 1940s, 2 ½ inches tall.
The Hopi Maiden Kachina is the embodiment of corn: she is clothed in a traditional homespun manta, wears her hair styled in “butterfly whorls” and has a long feather “beard” symbolizing rain. Made of cottonwood, paint, feathers, and string, circa 1940s, 2 ½ inches tall.
The Hopi Maiden Kachina is the embodiment of corn: she is clothed in a traditional homespun manta, wears her hair styled in “butterfly whorls” and has a long feather “beard” symbolizing rain. Made of cottonwood, paint, feathers, and string, circa 1940s, 2 ½ inches tall.