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Silver peyote church earrings
Adam Caesar
Fan with beaded handle
Unknown

Feather used for Native American church service / Unknown

Essay/Description

Eagle feather bunch for NAC staff. Large brown feather with barbs at tip tinted red. Smaller red geather tied to calamus of large feather. Bundle tied with a thin thread and wrapped in red tinted hide with three longer fringe-like thongs extending from base. Base of fringe indicated missing forth thong.

Curatorial Remarks

Individual feathers would have been used as fans themselves. They would have been used as fans to fan off an individual re entering the church house/service. Fanning an individual off purifies the individual reentering the space. You put cedar on the fire to create smoke, then use the smoke as a purifying agent. All feathers act in the same way. Peyote meetings are ritually pure environments and you have to maintain that pure environment, Feathers and fans are significant in maintaining this ritually pure and symbolic environment. You have to get rid of any external influences coming into that environment. You can also have a ritual activity outside a peyote meeting and fan yourself off. Single feather fans used.

Tags: feather, fan, red, single feather fan
People: Southern Plains, Oklahoma
Places: Southern Plains, Oklahoma
Purpose: peyote meeting, personal activity

From interviews with Dr. Garrick Bailey, 2018-2020 University of Tulsa, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology

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Title(s): 
Feather used for Native American church service
Creator(s): 
Unknown
Culture: 
Native American
Date: 
20th century
Materials/Techniques: 
feather
Classification: 
Object Type: 
Credit Line: 
Gift of Patrick Oliver
Accession No: 
85.112
Previous Number(s): 
TL1999.13.9
Department: 
Not On View

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