The Hopi Kokopelli was often represented as a human dancer, which seems appropriate, given his connection to music (and fertility rites, for that matter), and in my research for this post I found a lot of dancing "Kokes" and female partners...and even entire dance parties:
In recent times, Kokopelli has been adopted as a symbol of the Southwest U.S. and is a common figure all over the area (and is fairly common in other areas as well). You'll find his flute-playing (or dancing, or drumming) figure all over, from stained glass windows:
...to garden ornaments:
...to tribal tattoos:
...and jewelry. You knew I'd get to that at last, didn't you? :) Our friend Kristi Bowman-Gruel made these beautiful Kokopelli components, and I had to make some earrings! In the true Trickster spirit, I decided not to make them in classic Southwestern colors, but to choose whatever palette suited me:
Trickster Dance |
Earrings "recipe": colorful swirled lampies in teal, olivine, and chartreuse with black; little faceted ocean blue jade beads; copper bead caps and beaded beads; all tied together with green Irish linen cording and hung from my petite ear wires.
I like to think that the two dancers on Kristi's copper teardrops are Kokopelli and Kokopelmimi, but whoever they are, they're a beautiful couple. 💗
Thank you so much for reading--I'll be back in two weeks!
xoxo
Meridy
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