Product code: Vintage Hand painted oil on canvas Native American Hopi Kachina orders Dancer
There is pictures of lighting on painting with light no light. Its older painting on canvas. Framed 18 1:/2” wide by 25” height painting size 171/2” wide by 23 1/2” height. There are few nicks in the frame being older painting. The painting is very good condition. The artist is A. Uptegrono The Snake Dance held every two years by the Native American Hopi tribe dates back to the earliest era of human life in what is now the southwestern United States. Scholars believe that the dance was originally a water ceremony, because snakes were the traditional guardians of springs. Today it is primarily a rain ceremony, since the Hopis regard snakes as their "brothers" and rely on them to carry their prayers for rain to the underworld, where orders the gods and the spirits of the ancestors live. The tourists who flock to the Hopi villages to observe the ceremony, however, are usually more interested in the spectacle than they are in its power to influence the weather.
There is pictures of lighting on painting with light no light. Its older painting on canvas. Framed 18 1:/2” wide by 25” height painting size 171/2” wide by 23 1/2” height. There are few nicks in the frame being older painting. The painting is very good condition. The artist is A. Uptegrono The Snake Dance held every two years by the Native American Hopi tribe dates back to the earliest era of human life in what is now the southwestern United States. Scholars believe that the dance was originally a water ceremony, because snakes were the traditional guardians of springs. Today it is primarily a rain ceremony, since the Hopis regard snakes as their "brothers" and rely on them to carry their prayers for rain to the underworld, where orders the gods and the spirits of the ancestors live. The tourists who flock to the Hopi villages to observe the ceremony, however, are usually more interested in the spectacle than they are in its power to influence the weather.