Big God., March 1932.
File — Box: 2, Folder: 6
Scope and Content
From the Collection:
The Leland Wyman collection contains illustrations, slides and research material. They represent Wyman's research on Navajo myths and sandpaintings, which resulted in several publications. The research includes source material written by Gladys Reichard, Berard Haile, and Franc Newcomb, as well as illustrations of weavings by Hasteen Klah. It also contains 3 albums of color slides depicting Native American arts and crafts, especially Navajo. One other album contains slides of Oriental arts and crafts. The collection is divided into three series: Myths, Sandpaintings and Slides.
Myths includes Navajo stories collected/recorded by various researchers, including Father Berard Haile, Gladys Reichard, Gretchen Chapin, and Franc Newcomb. These are written versions of traditionally oral myths of the Navajo people. The myths vary in levels of importance and sacredness for the Navajo people. The collection includes accounts of the following myths, among others: Chiricahua Apache Windway Myth, Coyote Tales, Holyway Myth of Red Antway, Jicarilla Bear Dance, Male Shooting Chant Myth, Navaho Creation Myths, and The Waterway Myth.
The Sandpaintings series documents the comparative history of sandpaintings, which are a symbolic and ceremonial art form used by the Navajo to re-establish harmonious relationships within the natural world. Included are illustrations and research about sandpaintings from ceremonies such as the Awlway, Blessingway, Hailway, and Mountainway. The sandpainting ceremony is performed by a healer or medicine man, who is called the Singer. The images of the sandpaintings are passed down from generation to generation, through apprenticeships. In order to perform the ceremony, the Singer must have memorized the image, which is not recorded on paper. Some images illustrate the stories of Navajo myths. Once the Singer has created the sandpainting, the subject of the healing ceremony sits in the middle of the sandpainting and the Singer rubs different parts of his or her body with the sand. The sand is considered to be contaminated after a ceremony and is ultimately collected into a pile in the center of the floor and taken outside. The sand consists of small fragments of colored sandstone that is ground into a fine powder. Some sandpaintings are two feet square, while others are up to twenty feet square.
One of the first non-Navajo people to watch a ceremony was Gladys Reichard. She learned the Navajo language and for five summers apprenticed under a Singer. Reichard recorded and translated some of the ceremonies.
Navajo people began weaving the sandpainting images into rugs as early as 1883, as a way to preserve the images, while keeping the sandpainting art form and ceremony sacred. Hasteen Klah, a well known Navajo Singer, was one of the finest weavers of rugs depicting sandpainting designs. Sometimes he is referred to as Lefthanded Klah, because he wove left-handed. Klah met Franc Newcomb, who was a trader's wife. He invited her to witness a Sing in 1917. She asked him to explain the sandpaintings. He was hesitant at first, claiming that they had to be kept secret and sacred, but he ended up explaining 27 sandpaintings to her between 1917 and 1918. Newcomb recorded what she learned.
Myths includes Navajo stories collected/recorded by various researchers, including Father Berard Haile, Gladys Reichard, Gretchen Chapin, and Franc Newcomb. These are written versions of traditionally oral myths of the Navajo people. The myths vary in levels of importance and sacredness for the Navajo people. The collection includes accounts of the following myths, among others: Chiricahua Apache Windway Myth, Coyote Tales, Holyway Myth of Red Antway, Jicarilla Bear Dance, Male Shooting Chant Myth, Navaho Creation Myths, and The Waterway Myth.
The Sandpaintings series documents the comparative history of sandpaintings, which are a symbolic and ceremonial art form used by the Navajo to re-establish harmonious relationships within the natural world. Included are illustrations and research about sandpaintings from ceremonies such as the Awlway, Blessingway, Hailway, and Mountainway. The sandpainting ceremony is performed by a healer or medicine man, who is called the Singer. The images of the sandpaintings are passed down from generation to generation, through apprenticeships. In order to perform the ceremony, the Singer must have memorized the image, which is not recorded on paper. Some images illustrate the stories of Navajo myths. Once the Singer has created the sandpainting, the subject of the healing ceremony sits in the middle of the sandpainting and the Singer rubs different parts of his or her body with the sand. The sand is considered to be contaminated after a ceremony and is ultimately collected into a pile in the center of the floor and taken outside. The sand consists of small fragments of colored sandstone that is ground into a fine powder. Some sandpaintings are two feet square, while others are up to twenty feet square.
One of the first non-Navajo people to watch a ceremony was Gladys Reichard. She learned the Navajo language and for five summers apprenticed under a Singer. Reichard recorded and translated some of the ceremonies.
Navajo people began weaving the sandpainting images into rugs as early as 1883, as a way to preserve the images, while keeping the sandpainting art form and ceremony sacred. Hasteen Klah, a well known Navajo Singer, was one of the finest weavers of rugs depicting sandpainting designs. Sometimes he is referred to as Lefthanded Klah, because he wove left-handed. Klah met Franc Newcomb, who was a trader's wife. He invited her to witness a Sing in 1917. She asked him to explain the sandpaintings. He was hesitant at first, claiming that they had to be kept secret and sacred, but he ended up explaining 27 sandpaintings to her between 1917 and 1918. Newcomb recorded what she learned.
Dates
- March 1932.
Language of Materials
From the Collection:
English.
Access Restrictions
The collection is open for research.
Extent
From the Collection: 3 boxes (3 cu. ft.)
Repository Details
Part of the UNM Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections Repository
Contact:
University of New Mexico Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections
University Libraries, MSC05 3020
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque NM 87131
505-277-6451
University of New Mexico Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections
University Libraries, MSC05 3020
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque NM 87131
505-277-6451