![]() Their baskets (many of which have survived in gravesites) are heralded as a pure art form and one that was created not only by a primitive people but also by women. The Indians of Arizona and New Mexico made basket-molded pottery from 5000 to 1000 B.C. The Native Americans may well have left the greatest legacy to the world of baskets. Taping in the artist Native American heritage of his ancestors he felt a wooden pieced basket was an essential part of this sculpture due to its symbolism and history as a not to his family roots. The basket is one of humankind's oldest art forms, and it is certainly an ethnic and cultural icon filled with myth and motif, religion and symbolism, and decoration as well as usefulness. This is an example of the human spirit and the strength we all have, to carry on regardless of how harrowing our setbacks may have been. ![]() It seems to be virtually indestructible and will often return after it has suffered damage or has been severely cut back symbolic of the indestructability of family. Ivy is further considered a symbol of survival and determination for the same reasons. Ever furrowing and intertwining, the ivy is an example of the twists and turns our relationships and family connections take – but also a testimony to the long-lasting connections and bonds we form that last over the years. The historic symbolism of ivy, central to the sculpture by Rene Sepulveda as it reaches out of the wooden basket deals with connections of family, because of its propensity to interweave in growth. "Angelina" A Flowing Ivy, Abstract Wood Basket and Lava Rock Natural Sculpture by the Artist Rene Sepulveda was crafted as a piece to honor his 80-year-old aunt Bertha Angelina Sepulveda Rommel. ![]() ![]() "Angelina" Flowing Ivy, Abstract Wooden Basket and Lava Rock Natural Native American Inspired Sculpture by Artist Rene Sepulveda ![]()
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