
Eastern Cherokee Booger Mask
Eventually, these masks came to resemble the faces of the white European colonists. Occasionally animal faces – bear, buffalo, deer – appear in the Booger Dance to vary the scene. The animal masks lie in quite a different category from that of the regular Booger masks. They served a magic co-religious purpose in former times before the introduction of firearms. The Cherokee also made masks for hunting, as aids to help them get close to game animals. Their masks boldly emphasized the distinctive features of animals, such as the eyes, ears, nose, or antlers. Booger and animal masks were made of buckeye wood, generally coloured dark red from pigment of red earth of the soil anywhere on the mountain sides of the reservation, a red stain made by boiling sumach berries, or with black stain boiled down from black walnut bark and poke-weed berries. This mask features carved holes on forehead for a dancer's or hunter's eyes,dark and light vegetal stains used to enhance eyes, faded vegetal stain throughout, mouth dark red vegetal stain is mostly intact, scuffing exhibited on mask throughout. Reverse has two nails for hanging with attached cord. 5.875"W x 11.75"L x 3"D
PERIOD: 19th Century
ORIGIN: Southeast - Cherokee, Native American
SIZE: 5.875"W x 11.75"L x 3"D
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Eastern Cherokee Booger Mask
Eventually, these masks came to resemble the faces of the white European colonists. Occasionally animal faces – bear, buffalo, deer – appear in the Booger Dance to vary the scene. The animal masks lie in quite a different category from that of the regular Booger masks. They served a magic co-religious purpose in former times before the introduction of firearms. The Cherokee also made masks for hunting, as aids to help them get close to game animals. Their masks boldly emphasized the distinctive features of animals, such as the eyes, ears, nose, or antlers. Booger and animal masks were made of buckeye wood, generally coloured dark red from pigment of red earth of the soil anywhere on the mountain sides of the reservation, a red stain made by boiling sumach berries, or with black stain boiled down from black walnut bark and poke-weed berries. This mask features carved holes on forehead for a dancer's or hunter's eyes,dark and light vegetal stains used to enhance eyes, faded vegetal stain throughout, mouth dark red vegetal stain is mostly intact, scuffing exhibited on mask throughout. Reverse has two nails for hanging with attached cord. 5.875"W x 11.75"L x 3"D
PERIOD: 19th Century
ORIGIN: Southeast - Cherokee, Native American
SIZE: 5.875"W x 11.75"L x 3"D
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Description
Eventually, these masks came to resemble the faces of the white European colonists. Occasionally animal faces – bear, buffalo, deer – appear in the Booger Dance to vary the scene. The animal masks lie in quite a different category from that of the regular Booger masks. They served a magic co-religious purpose in former times before the introduction of firearms. The Cherokee also made masks for hunting, as aids to help them get close to game animals. Their masks boldly emphasized the distinctive features of animals, such as the eyes, ears, nose, or antlers. Booger and animal masks were made of buckeye wood, generally coloured dark red from pigment of red earth of the soil anywhere on the mountain sides of the reservation, a red stain made by boiling sumach berries, or with black stain boiled down from black walnut bark and poke-weed berries. This mask features carved holes on forehead for a dancer's or hunter's eyes,dark and light vegetal stains used to enhance eyes, faded vegetal stain throughout, mouth dark red vegetal stain is mostly intact, scuffing exhibited on mask throughout. Reverse has two nails for hanging with attached cord. 5.875"W x 11.75"L x 3"D
PERIOD: 19th Century
ORIGIN: Southeast - Cherokee, Native American
SIZE: 5.875"W x 11.75"L x 3"D























