-40%
Natural & Orange Rnd Basket w/slant curls, 2.5" Kenny Keezer, Clara Keezer's son
$ 35.77
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
This med/sm (2.5" diam) round ash and tidal sweetgrass basket is by Kenny Keezer, Passamaquoddy. The basket's sides of natural ash have 4 rows of slant curls with 3 thin strips of dyed orange ash separating those rows. Slant curls are placed so as to form 2 rows of X's. The lid has a decorative bow handle, a signature style of the Keezer family. The top of the lid is woven with tightly, finely braided tidal sweetgrass from the lid's edge to near the center of the lid were there is a strip of dyed orange ash and 4 rows woven of natural ash.The lid has a decorative bow handle, a signature style of the Keezer family.
Kenny Keezer is the youngest son of much honored Clara Neptune Keezer (1930-2016), Passamaquoddy basket maker who was a winner of a NEA 2002 Heritage Fellowship award for her basketry work. Kenny learned basketry from his mother and incorporates many of her signature styles into his work.
The basket is 2.5" in diameter (Kenny makes 2", 2.25" and 2.5" diameter small round baskets - guess that makes this one the "larger small) and it is 3" tall - (including 1/4" bow handle). Clara almost always placed a sweetgrass braid between the inner rims of her baskets. Kenny does this as well -
Among many honors, Clara Neptune Keezer was given the NEA Heritage Fellowship award. - According to the NEA website, this award is "the country's highest honor in the folk and traditional art" -... and includes all folk arts and crafts including but not limited to - music, dance, performance art and traditional crafts and arts.
This basket is made of brown ash splints, the traditional material of Maine and Eastern Canadian Wabanaki basketmakers and also incorporates plain tidal sweetgrass to wrap the rim of the basket. Tidal sweet grass grows on tidal marshes within view of the Keezer home in the most Northeastern corner of this country... The land and people of the dawn- The Passamaquoddy reserve near Eastport Maine where the dawn hits this country first. The grass here has been picked, dried, combed and braided by Kenny.
Last photo is of Kenny (in orange shirt), his brother Rocky and mother, Clara..... photo taken on a visit to their home about 5 years prior to Clara's passing