Rug
ClassificationsTextiles-floor coverings-rugs and mats
Culture
Navajo
Datec. 1920
Made AtNew Mexico, United States, North America
MediumWool and pigment
Dimensions52 × 76 in. (132.1 × 193 cm)
Credit LineGift of Dennis Aigner
Object number2021.4.1
DescriptionThis is a Navajo rug which dates to approximately 1920. Use of the swastika was favored at the Crystal and Ganado trading posts between 1890 and 1920 but did appear elsewhere until World War II. Despite its modern connotations, the motif has been an auspicious symbol for at least thousands of years. For the Navajo, it was a figurative representation of the ‘whirling logs,’ a commonly depicted sand painting from the Night Chant and together with an axis with two legs—where the swastika instead has four—forms a visual pun of the Navajo mantra, “successfully attaining a ripe old age by daily spiritual renewal according to the universal beauty of the cosmos.” Its use in Navajo textiles was probably more inspired by the introduction of the Asiatic motif by Western traders. The central design and overall prevalence of white, black, gray, and brown indicate that this rug was likely made around the Two Grey Hills Trading Post.On View
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