Ritual Platter
Item number A17201 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number A17201 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Ritual spell or curse on a platter. Food platter is white with silver decoration around rim. Covering the dish is a drawing of a human figure made of a mixture of red ochre and oil.
According to the accession records this is a Cowichan spell/curse on a platter: "The woman represented was asked for a dish that both she and her neglectful husband used. In drawing the figure, the person who made the dish left the arms until last. The significance being that the right arm (as you face the dish) is the husband's lifeline - it was drawn first and extends to the crotch, the woman's lifeline (the left arm) was then drawn, and the crotch overlaps her husband's lifeline thus giving her control over her husband. (Della Kew, Musqueam, 1973).
shamanism; ritual
The figure represents a woman whose husband was neglecting her and her children.
The platter was donated for research purposes only; it is not to be viewed by the public.
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shamanism; ritual
The figure represents a woman whose husband was neglecting her and her children.
Ritual spell or curse on a platter. Food platter is white with silver decoration around rim. Covering the dish is a drawing of a human figure made of a mixture of red ochre and oil.
The platter was donated for research purposes only; it is not to be viewed by the public.
According to the accession records this is a Cowichan spell/curse on a platter: "The woman represented was asked for a dish that both she and her neglectful husband used. In drawing the figure, the person who made the dish left the arms until last. The significance being that the right arm (as you face the dish) is the husband's lifeline - it was drawn first and extends to the crotch, the woman's lifeline (the left arm) was then drawn, and the crotch overlaps her husband's lifeline thus giving her control over her husband. (Della Kew, Musqueam, 1973).
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