HOME | DD

lupagreenwolf — Goddess Anput Headdress 5

Published: 2011-10-28 12:23:25 +0000 UTC; Views: 1931; Favourites: 29; Downloads: 27
Redirect to original
Description One of fourteen shots of this piece.
Details after the background lore.

On Etsy: [link]

*******************
Tonight, a Goddess found me.

For many years, I have acknowledged Anubis--Anpu--Yinepu--as the God of dead things, related to my art with the remains of animals. And he has watched over my work in the background, quietly, only occasionally coming forth to speak if he feels the need to add a bit of guidance. But still...so distant.

Then the day came when the hide of a black coyote came into my possession. Even having lived and died a half a world away and thousands of years past the jackals of Egypt that gave their form to the God, this coyote carried that energy, inexplicably and completely.

Almost.

Except this coyote was female, and held onto that beyond death almost defiantly. And through that skin spirit, Anput made Herself known to me. Where Anpu had been distant, though not uncaring, Anput settled Herself down in front of me, and in the same way Artemis had done so long ago when I was younger, She looked at me and said "Doesn't something look familiar?"

Familiar? How could I even know what to look for, when I knew not Whom I beheld? I knew scant little of her, as did anyone today--the feminine aspect--some said wife--of the better-known Anpu, had had little surviving lore and few adherents today. "Goddess of the 17th nome of Egypt, with the standard of the jackal" told me little.

And so I returned to Her, perplexed. And before I could say a word, She saw my confusion, and She spoke. “I am the Goddess of funerary arts. When the stones were carved into the faces of pharaohs long-dead, My hand guided the chisel. When each set of canopic jars was formed, I shaped each detail and applied every stroke of the brush. And now, when you weave hide and bone into sacred art, My hands wrap around yours, and I see the work through your eyes”.

The black coyote then wrapped around my shoulders, wishing that I would prepare her to move on to the next person in her afterlife, for, as for so many, I am only a threshold, a transitional point. And so we enmeshed ourselves, for three days and nights, in the sacred preparation and creation of what would carry a piece of each of us.

And at the end of the three days and three nights, I wore a cloak upon my shoulders, with the sacred mantle and hood as the Goddess directed me and as the black coyote concurred and as I created. Khepri stretched his wings wide, and the name and standard of Anpu—Input—cascaded in hieroglyphs.

This, then, was our inauguration, the Goddess and I. The black coyote would go forth as Her emissary while I would remain here and continue the sacred work as I always had, only with the consciousness of She who guided me.

***************

Headdress of Anput

This headdress is dedicated to Anput, the female counterpart to Anubis. It is in no way meant to be an authentic replication of any traditional Egyptian creations, but is instead a hybrid of my own style mixed with elements inspired by a very general Egyptian aesthetic, guided by sacred inspiration (and many pictures of old statues and paintings from various dynasties!).

This headdress is based around a black (melanistic) coyote hide; this is a rare, but naturally occurring mutation in this species. This particular hide came from a small female, black with a white blaze on her chest. She is complete with all four paws and claws; the only piece missing is her lower jaw, which was removed for the purpose of this project. Her ears and face have been reshaped to a more natural appearance; they were originally rather flat and misshapen, as many hides are after tanning. Her face has been given painted details, to include hold around the eyes, and gold accents on her nose. I inserted gold and black leather in her ears to mimic the striping often found in the ears of depictions of Anubis.

The leather is one whole tanned lambskin hide, dyed black, and then with an overlay of gold on one side. It forms the side panels of the hood, again striped, as homage to the Nemes headdress that Anubis and other deities were commonly depicted wearing; there are very few images of Anput Herself that remain, and as I was working on this inspired piece this is what She indicated She wanted.

The mantle over the shoulders was the most difficult portion of this. I drew out the scarab and wings with a black fine tipped paint pen, and then colored it in with acrylic and oil paint pens in two shades of blue, green, and red, and detailed in gold. I tested all these on a scrap of the same leather to be sure of the colorfastness. The hieroglyphs descending from the mantle read “Input”, an alternate of Anput’s name, and below that is the standard of 17th nome (district) of Egypt, over which She reigned.

The beaded accents on these leather pieces are a combination of new (reproduction) faience scarabs, and genuine old Egyptian faience beads (exact dynasty unknown). Each one of these dangles is about 1 1/8” long.

The headdress ties on with straps under the chin, and the forelegs also are tied together with more leather strappage. It is one size fits most; for scale, I am 5’4” and 115 pounds.

This project did take me the better part of three days and nights with only small breaks. It is by far one of the most ambitious pieces I have done, and represents a shift to more elaborate and involved crafted artwork.

I am available for custom work, small and large. Please feel free to contact me.

On Etsy: [link]
Related content
Comments: 11

Taigas-den [2013-12-05 03:36:36 +0000 UTC]

Wow, I'm speechless... this is absolutely stunning and radiates with love

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

lupagreenwolf In reply to Taigas-den [2013-12-07 02:09:00 +0000 UTC]

Thank you

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Lorna-RoseFoX [2013-09-23 02:31:18 +0000 UTC]

gross thats its real fur I am sorry to say.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

lupagreenwolf In reply to Lorna-RoseFoX [2013-09-23 05:06:43 +0000 UTC]

And you expect what response to this comment, exactly?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lorna-RoseFoX In reply to lupagreenwolf [2013-09-23 06:49:09 +0000 UTC]

just find it wrong even though you didn't kill the animal
I still find it disgraceful to use dead animals as art

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

lupagreenwolf In reply to Lorna-RoseFoX [2013-09-23 15:31:30 +0000 UTC]

Would you go to a powwow and tell the Native American dancers there that the regalia that includes hides is disgraceful?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lorna-RoseFoX In reply to lupagreenwolf [2013-09-23 16:04:59 +0000 UTC]

That was then when things were hard to come by and where not left to waste
I have read about native americans not to mention how much they in tow suffered from the greed from western ancestors (shamefully mostly my country)

which why I find thanks giving day a kick in the teeth because it ended so badly for native americans
as if they had not suffered enough.


 Politics of Addressing Violence Against Aboriginal people still carry on 
which is just as disgraceful how the disabled are treated like vermin because people are too narrow minded to care if others even though have good hearts don't fit in the poisonous cliques.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Icefire11 [2012-11-24 06:24:20 +0000 UTC]

This is a beautiful piece of work.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

lupagreenwolf In reply to Icefire11 [2012-11-24 16:24:39 +0000 UTC]

Many thanks!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Jaextra [2011-10-29 20:31:39 +0000 UTC]

This is excellent.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

lupagreenwolf In reply to Jaextra [2011-10-30 07:50:31 +0000 UTC]

Thank you I put a lot into it--and got a lot out of it, too!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0