Kevin Pochoema

Wolf Kachina / Kweo

9 1/4" total height


"Whenever the Deer or Antelope Kachinas dance in the plaza, another kachina is very frequently seen with them - the Wolf Kachina (Kweo). He is their side dancer, and the stick he holds in his hands is said to represent trees and bushes that he hides behind as he watches them.

"When he appears, the Deer and the Antelope are wary because in real life he is the hunter of antelope. After the dance it is customary for the Hopis to offer the Wolf Kachina cornmeal or prayer feathers so that he will use his knowledge to find and capture these game animals.

"For some reason the kachina calls forth the Hopi urge to elaborate. He is not usually [very] colorful nor realistic and is consequently more forceful in appearance."

- Barton Wright, "Kachinas: a Hopi artist's documentary" (164)

Here he appears with a rattle in one hand and his staff in the other. His fur headdress nicely done, he stand straight on - giving the audience a full view of his magnificent face. His body is painted with the traditional markings.

This kachina was carved by Kevin Pochoema, who is dedicated to perfection and maintaining the traditional Hopi culture through his Kachinas. Kevin is recognized as one of the great Kachina doll carvers of his time. He is barely more than 34 years old and has been seriously carving since he was 15. His family is from the village of Paaqavi.

By the time he was 26, Kevin was winning major awards at the Gallup Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial and O'Odham Tash Festival. He rarely enters his dolls for judging, as they are immediately purchased by serious collectors.

Kevin has an incredible ability to transform his dolls, it's almost as if the spectators are watching the Kachinas themselves. Kevin says: "I want to make my dolls flow...I like to show scenes that relate to the Kachina doll I'm carving." Kevin achieves this through natural looking movement and costuming. He is a master at elaborate detail and superior finish, which sets his work apart from other carvers.

Kevin is an expert at the use of oil-based paints and pigments. The allows him to create subtle variations and concentrations of color to enhance the very strong sense of reality. It takes much experimentation to get his color palette just right.

Kevin has carved this figure out of a single piece of cottonwood root. The items in his hands are the only additions.

Even his bases are highly detailed. Kevin usually depicts his figures atop a village setting, but this one features an elaborate grouping of prickly pear cactus and buried pueblo pottery.

According to "Art of the Hopi" "Detailed carvings in the bases of Kevin's wood sculptures often relate to the ceremony in which the Kachinas appear".

Kevin Pochoema is featured on the cover of Art of the Hopi by Lois & Jerry Jacka and on page 67. He is also well represented in Kent McManis new book Hopi Katsina Dolls on many pages throughout the book. In it, Kevin states: "I keep trying to improve so I won't carve 'just another doll'."

Kevin is from Hotevilla, Arizona and has signed the doll: "Pochoema" on top of the base.

 

Gallery Price: $3,600.00

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