by Yukie Adams
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$22.35
Item A108 12 x 10 0 lbs. 2 oz. 4" x 6" print, with 3" ivory mat, ready for framing (shown without mat)
More from Yukie Adams Yukie AdamsIn 1984 artist Yukie Adams married Henry Adams. Henry was an Alaskan Tlingit tribal citizen. When Yukie married him she became a part of his Tlingit culture. Yukie naturally became interested in the native art of the Northwest Coast. Yukie studied and with her newly acquired knowledge, she began creating contemporary Northwest Coast Native designs. Yukie put her designs on drums, paintings, serigraphs, and prints. After her husband passed away, she began to take her work to a new level. Yukie started to create woodcarvings and mixed media. This combination of modernism and traditionalism is unique to her works of art. More Related Items HummingbirdThe hummingbird is the most common species in the region, and in some areas these tiny, active, well-loved birds are year round inhabitants. In the Northwest Coast culture the hummingbird is said to have nested in the unruly hair of the "Wild Woman of the Woods", flying around her as she walked through the woods. She is the guardian of the forest creatures, and the protector of the Hummingbird. Stories tell of high-ranking women arriving at feasts with live hummingbirds flying around them to announce their beauty, wealth, prestige and close communion with the spirit of the bird. The Hummingbird is a symbol of love and beauty.
Understanding Northwest Coast Art - Cheryl Shearar
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