$152.00

Item 11446

1 x 7 x 2 1/2

0 lbs. 2 oz.

BH_FrogBBH_FrogB

 

 

Frog

Sterling Silver Cuff - by Barry Herem


Barry HeremMore from Barry Herem

Barry Herem

Barry Herem is a Seattle artist who has worked in the Northwest Coast Indian style for many years. He has written about the subject as a reviewer, and as an unofficial ethnographer and archaeologist who has done fieldwork collecting and publishing data about the pre-contact Tlingit and Haida of Southeast Alaska. Barry's work is symbolic, animistic, and organic, and has been shown in nearly every major American city and many foreign ones. Barry's taut and harmonious work owes much to the essential forms of Northwest Coast native art, which he has renewed and extended in what he calls "equal parts invention and assimilation." He has created artworks in wood, steel, bronze, fabric, aluminum plate, glass and serigraphic print form. He has created several large sculptures, including two 30-foot aluminum plate whale sculptures for the Portland, Oregon International Airport and a large acrylic sculpture for the Seattle-Tacoma (Sea-Tac) airport. He has created more than 40 limited-edition serigraphs, plus 5x7 art cards based on them. Barry spends every summer exploring the island seascapes of British Columbia and Southeast Alaska in his large sea-going canoe. He also frequently guides a 65-foot schooner, "Crusader," on voyages of adventure through the same magical region.

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Frog

Frog is a creature of great importance in the Northwest Coast art and culture. As a creature that lives in two worlds, water and land, the frog is revered for its adaptability, knowledge and power to traverse worlds and inhabit diverse realms, both natural and supernatural. Frogs are primary spirit helpers of shamans. Frog is a great communicator, and often represents the common ground or voice of the people. These are vocal, singing creatures, and the voice and song are believed to contain divine power and magic. In the art, Frog is often shown sharing its tongue or touching tongues with another creature in an exchange of knowledge and power. The Frog, although not found in the territory of the northern Indians, plays a significant part in their mythology. It has been suggested that the lore of the frog came with their ancestors from Asia. A wide toothless mouth, flat nose, and showing feet and toes usually portray the Frog.

 

Understanding Northwest Coast Art - Cheryl Shearar

 
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