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Two Graces, Art Books and Curios, Taos, NM
Home
Art
Holly Sievers
Taos and the World Art
Robert Cafazzo
Books
Curios
Jewelry
Pueblo Pottery
Kachinas
Spanish Colonial Art & Objects of Faith
Tins, Toys, Ceramics, and Folk Art
Southwest and Native American Curios
Blog
Contact
0
0
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Folder: Art
Books
Folder: Curios
Blog
Contact
Back
Holly Sievers
Taos and the World Art
Robert Cafazzo
Back
Jewelry
Pueblo Pottery
Kachinas
Spanish Colonial Art & Objects of Faith
Tins, Toys, Ceramics, and Folk Art
Southwest and Native American Curios
Southwest and Native American Curios Gray Faced Ewe by Elsie Benally
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Gray Faced Ewe by Elsie Benally

$125.00

A Mud Toy by Navajo artist Elsie Benally, featuring a wooly white ewe with a sweet countenance with a gray face and big black eyes and black feet peeking out underneath. 1980s - 1990s, unfired clay, paint, and wool, 1 ½ x 2 ¼ x 3 ½ inches.

Mud Toys, sunbaked clay figures decorated with paint, fabric scraps, and wool, are an art form revived by Elsie Benally and Mamie Deschellie in the 1980s in Farmington New Mexico. on the edge of the Navajo Reservation. Elsie’s figures often depict animals wrapped in homespun wool, with sweet whimsical faces, or horses or circus animals ridden by Navajos decked out in fine clothing, and sometimes riding double with children or small animals.

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A Mud Toy by Navajo artist Elsie Benally, featuring a wooly white ewe with a sweet countenance with a gray face and big black eyes and black feet peeking out underneath. 1980s - 1990s, unfired clay, paint, and wool, 1 ½ x 2 ¼ x 3 ½ inches.

Mud Toys, sunbaked clay figures decorated with paint, fabric scraps, and wool, are an art form revived by Elsie Benally and Mamie Deschellie in the 1980s in Farmington New Mexico. on the edge of the Navajo Reservation. Elsie’s figures often depict animals wrapped in homespun wool, with sweet whimsical faces, or horses or circus animals ridden by Navajos decked out in fine clothing, and sometimes riding double with children or small animals.

A Mud Toy by Navajo artist Elsie Benally, featuring a wooly white ewe with a sweet countenance with a gray face and big black eyes and black feet peeking out underneath. 1980s - 1990s, unfired clay, paint, and wool, 1 ½ x 2 ¼ x 3 ½ inches.

Mud Toys, sunbaked clay figures decorated with paint, fabric scraps, and wool, are an art form revived by Elsie Benally and Mamie Deschellie in the 1980s in Farmington New Mexico. on the edge of the Navajo Reservation. Elsie’s figures often depict animals wrapped in homespun wool, with sweet whimsical faces, or horses or circus animals ridden by Navajos decked out in fine clothing, and sometimes riding double with children or small animals.

benally.grayfaced.sheep.oblique.jpg
benally.grayfaced.sheep.frontal.jpg
benally.grayfaced.sheep.left.side.jpg
benally.grayfaced.sheep.rear.jpg
benally.grayfaced.sheep.right.side.jpg
benally.grayfaced.sheep.bottom.jpg