Ch'-ayah suhih (Box Turtle)

Type of art: Diverse Art Forms

SOLD

 

Black soapstone turtle effigy inspired by ancient Spiro turtle shell engraving- p.261 of "The Spiro Mound: A Photo Essay" with center symbol possibly designating friendship. Rough stone was hand cut, shaped, sanded & polished with hand saws, rasps, files & sandpapers. Hand engraving done with non-electric tools.

Materials: Black soapstone

Technique: Hand cut, shaped, sanded, polished & engraved (no electric tools)

Size: 3 7/8" H x 3" W x 5/16" D

Price: $345
A Wayne "Tay Sha" Earles
Caddo
TaySha.Art@gmail.com
My given Caddo name, Tay Sha, means "Wolf" & "Friend", for he guides you to the other side when you pass on. The Caddo called their friends/allies this, but the Spanish hear "Tejas" which evolved into the state name, Texas. As an Oklahoman & OU grad, I'm not sure how I feel about this, but I do want to be a friend to all Caddo, making them aware of our ancestor's artistic excellence and the need to continue this wonderful heritage. I began in 2015 with stonework art: cultural stonework & contemporary stone jewelry with engraving inspired by ancient Caddo/Spiro designs. My cultural art honors the ancient Caddo stone artifacts mostly from Spiro Mounds, as monolithic axes, ceremonial maces, effigies, chunkey & bannerstones. Using hand saws, rasps & files, I'm amazed at what our ancestors achieved with only stone tools on harder stone than my soapstone, pipestone & alabaster. My jewelry is stone pendant necklaces engraved with intricate pottery, shell & stone artifact designs.
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