WILLIAMSBURG, Va. — As America honors Native American Heritage Month in November, The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation announces that it has received a rare Navajo First Phase Chief’s Blanket from the late classic period (1865-1870) in the terraced style. The weaving is the first of its kind to enter the foundation’s collection and joins two Navajo pictorial weavings that were acquired in 2019.
For generations, anonymous Navajo women working on hand looms created brilliantly colored, boldly designed pictorial blankets and rugs as was their longstanding cultural and artistic tradition. The earliest of Navajo weavings were blankets to be worn, known as “chief blankets,” made with a simple, horizontally striped and banded design and format. The weavers adapted and modified their work from the world around them and created an art form that is uniquely theirs and provides insight into the Navajo culture at the turn of the 19th century. As the chief blankets were made for wear, many did not survive.
This example is a rectangular weaving of one panel produced in native handspun wool and raveled wool in salmon (aniline dye), blue (indigo dye) and the natural wool colors of brown and white. The pattern from the top consists of a stripe of salmon with a blue terraced design followed by a stripe of white. Alternating stripes of brown and white form the body of the blanket with another stripe of salmon with a blue terraced design in the middle and at the bottom. Small self-tassels are attached at each corner.
“This chief’s blanket is a beautiful specimen of weaving,” said Kimberly Smith Ivey, Colonial Williamsburg’s senior curator of textiles. “It’s finely woven, and the blanket itself feels almost like silk. The beautiful deep indigo blue stripes are hard to capture in a photograph, but are stunning in natural light.”
This unique textile is a gift from Rex and Pat Lucke, American folk art enthusiasts who have been fascinated for many years with the artistic expression of Navajo weavers. The Luckes, who began collecting antiques, folk art and other artifacts in the early 1970s, discovered Navajo weavings while visiting an American Indian arts gallery in Scottsdale, Arizona, and thought it would be a fitting addition to their folk art collection. Today, the Luckes enjoy living among their collections in their Nebraska home.
Although this gift is not currently on display at the Art Museums, Navajo Weavings: Adapting Tradition, an exhibition that opened in September, can be seen at the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum through December 2022. Navajo Weavings features six extraordinary weavings from the Lucke Collection, none of which have been displayed at Colonial Williamsburg before.
Additional information about the Art Museums and Colonial Williamsburg, as well as tickets, are available online at colonialwilliamsburg.org, or by calling (855)-296-6627.