ARH145H test 1 Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Question | Answer |
Anasazi | Bowl - mostly closed, geometric designs, black and white (usually) |
Mimbres | Bowl - open, ceremonial, animal designs, kill hole! used for burial |
Hohokam | Pithouses and platform mounds, sophisticated irrigation system, ceremonial ball courts (influence from Mexico, syncretic) |
Zuni | Deer in the house design, rosettes. Pottery. |
Hopi | Sikyatki style (discovered, revived early 1900s) by Nampeyo. Kachinas. |
Acoma | Lucy Lewis - pottery. Intricate geometric black & white repeating patterns. Contemporary-ish? 1898-1992 |
Apache | Basket weaving |
Casa Rinconada | Kiva in Chaco Canyon, aligned with cardinal directions. Probably the site of major ceremonies. |
Navajo | Weavings! Different phases, different styles. Vegetal and natural dyes. |
Chaco Canyon | Northwestern New Mexico, Pueblo/Chacoan people |
Fajada Butte | In Chaco Canyon, sun daggers align with sun on solstices. Act as calendar, way to mark time |
Fransiscans | Involved in Pueblo revolt |
Kachinas | Made only by men, given only to girls (except cradle dolls) 3 kinds. Hopi. |
Kill Hole | In Mimbres pottery, used for burial |
Koshare | Sacred 'clowns' almost, Roxanne Swentzell |
Parfleche | Rawhide bag |
Po'pay | Leader of Pueblo Revolt 1680 - shown with knotted rope (used to count down days) |
Pueblo Bonito | In Chaco Canyon, most celebrated, largest and best known GREAT HOUSE |
Pueblo Revolt 1680 | August 10, 1680, Po'pay and Pueblos drove away Fransiscans and priests, kept them away for 12 years |
San Ildefonso black/black pottery | Maria Martinez. Black on black designs, very popular, she started signing her name to others' work to help them sell it |
Shaman/shamanism | Sacred medicine man, could travel through the worlds/dimensions to bring back wisdom and healing powers. Used drums with designs. |
Sipapu | Hole in the bottom of a kiva where the spirits would come through from other worlds |
Syncretic | Blend of 2+ different cultural styles. Examples: matachines dance, squash blossom, cosmic tree (christianity) |
Trickster | Clever, caused chaos. Raven and Coyote (raven much smarter than coyote) |
Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian | in NM, founded by Mary Wheelwright and Hosteen Klah |
Winter count | One of the ways of keeping records (also - time ball, oral history) |
World tree/cosmic tree | connects all the worlds - heavens, earth, spirit world. ties to christianity (syncretic) |
Kiva | partially subterranean, used in ceremonies. Niches, cutouts, sipapu |
Hogan | Male (forked-pole, simpe) and female (6 or 8 sided, East entrance) form. Now ceremonial, used to be for living. |
Pit house | Like Kiva but used for living, not ceremonies |
Platform mound | Hohokam. mound used to support a structure or activity |
Pueblo | community |
Marcus Amerman | Contemporary Choctaw bead and glasswork artist |
Hosteen Klah | 1920s, was a man but lived as a woman, blended male and female artwork and was the first to do so. Sandpaintings + weavings |
Lucy Lewis | Acoma, intricate black/white designs of pottery |
James Luna | Contemporary multimedia artist |
Maria Martinez | San Ildefonso, black/black pottery, early 1900s, signed name to other work |
Nampeyo | Hopi, helped revive sikyatki style pottery |
Diego Romero | contemporary artist, potter, does native-influenced pop art on his pottery |
Roxanne Swentzell | sculptor, known for koshares |
Acquisition of artifacts: | trade, purchase, gift, violence, theft |
Created by:
Kristinaguice
Popular Miscellaneous sets