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Artworks
UNIDENTIFIED ARTIST, PANAWAHPSKEK (PENOBSCOT)
A Penoboscot Chief's Cape Collar and Cuffs, c. 1890-1910red wool felt, opaque and translucent glass beads, chenille cloth, and cotton thread, collar: 20 x 17.75 x 0.25 in (50.8 x 45.1 x 0.6 cm) / cuffs: 4.5 x 7 x 0.75 in (11.4 x 17.8 x 1.9 cm)
unsigned;
the collar and cuffs tailored from red wool felt;
decorated with symmetrical floral and scrolling foliate motifs, with scalloped beadwork and brown silk binding on the edge;
backed with grey chenille;
accompanied by a photograph of woman wearing the collar and cuffs at a costume affair;
with custom-made acrylic and canvas display box.
LOT 65
ESTIMATE: $10,000 — $15,000
PRICE REALIZED: $9,000.00Among the Penobscot of south-central Maine, cape collars and cuffs were worn by men as regalia worn at dances and various important ceremonies such as the installation of chiefs. Probably...Among the Penobscot of south-central Maine, cape collars and cuffs were worn by men as regalia worn at dances and various important ceremonies such as the installation of chiefs. Probably based on decorated coats worn in the 1700s and early 1800s, the earliest collars were made in three parts (a yoke and two front panels) and were ornamented with white seed beads in double-curve motifs on red or black fabrics, edged with silk; the cuffs were similarly ornamented. Later collars were one-piece with beaded designs of double-curve and/or floral and foliate motifs. This stunning set of collar and cuffs embodies the Penobscot design tradition at its fullest and finest. The complex and richly varied beadwork is executed on a rich red background, and the set is beautifully preserved.
References: For a Penobscot beaded collar see Ralph T. Coe, Sacred Circles: Two Thousand Years of North American Indian Art, (Kansas City: Nelson Gallery of Art, 1977), cat. 85; for a hood see cat. 86; for a belt see cat. 90. For similar Maliseet examples see Stephen J. Augustine, Mi’kmaq & Maliseet Cultural Ancestral Material, (Gatineau: Canadian Museum of Civilization, 2005), pp. 131, 132.
Provenance
By descent through the family to the previous owner, one of whose ancestors, either a great-great-grandfather or a great-grandfather had operated a trading post on the Penobscot River;
Christie's Auction, New York, American Indian Art Auction, 11 Jan 2004, Lot 207;
Acquired from the above by the present Private Collection, Toronto.
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