Loren Phillips

Ogre Woman

16" total height


"The awesome figure of the Monster Woman [Soyok Wuhti] appears during the Powamu ceremony as one of the many Soyoko who threaten the lives of the children. Dressed all in black, with long stragling hair, staring eyes and a wide-fanged mouth, she carries a blood smeared knife and a long jangling crook - a truely fearsome creature to the children.

When she speaks, it is in a wailing falsetto or with a long dismal hoot of 'Soyoko'-u-u-u,' from which her name is derived. She may reach for the children with the long crook and threaten to put them in the basket on her back, or to cut off their heads with the large knife that she carries in her hand utterly terrifying her young audience.

On some mesas she may be the ogre that threatens a small child who has been naughty and bargains with a relative to ransom the child, but on others she is not. In some villages she leads the procession of the ogres; in others she remains at the side, content to make threatening gestures."

- Barton Wright, Kachinas: a Hopi Artist's Documentary (74)

This awesome Ogre Woman was carved by one of the finest Hopi carvers of today, Loren Phillips. Loren was born in Moencopi, Arizona in 1942. Loren consistently wins "Best of Show" awards, especially at the annual Hopi Artists exhibition at the Museum of Northern Arizona in the past. Because Loren participates in the ceremonial dances, he knows every symbolic detail that is significant to each kachina doll he carves.

Loren's tools for carving are predominately pocket and hunting knives, from which he carves the finer details of patterns, textures and decorative lines. He is very particular about the sanding and finishing of his dolls, especially the last steps of staining and painting. Loren has developed his own method of applying stains to give the surface a beautiful luster, through which the grain of the wood is still visible. All of this is very evident when you look at this kachina.

Loren is very meticulous about the creation of his dolls, and his hallmark is the motion and action he puts into every doll. This kachina is truly an action doll. The posture shows tremendous action, with arms reached out to warn any who would misbehave!

Loren Phillips is featured in every book about Hopi carvers, including "The Art of the Hopi" by Jerry & Lois Jacka, "Kachina Dolls" by Helga Tiewes, "Kachina Doll Carving" by Erik Bromberg and "Hopi Kachina Dolls and their Carvers" by Theda Bassman.

Loren has signed the bottom of the base: "Loren Phillips, Hopi, Moencopi Village."

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$3,900.00

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