
Evalena Henry
Evalena
Henry , of Peridot, Arizona, is recognized as a master basket
Weaver
amongst the San Carlos Apaches. Her mother. Cecilia Henry, taught her to make
baskets when she was fifteen years old. Cecilia Henry played a vital role in the
renaissance of twined basket making that has occurred on the San Carlos
Reservation since the 1960’s. “I learned it from my mother. It was very
difficult at first to learn how to split the willow. But I wanted to learn so
badly. I love baskets…. Baskets are a very special art, our traditional
art….”

The Apache make three distinct basket types: coiled trays and plates; the
Tus, an urn shaped water container; and the burden basket. Evalena
specializes in making ceremonial baskets, large baskets and burden baskets for
the Sunrise Dance, a coming of age ceremony for girls. “I use different kinds
of willows, sumac, and cottonwoods. There are about eight different kinds of
natural colored willows: black, red, maroon, yellow, green, brown, orange, gray
and cottonwood for white.” She uses images of deer, crown dancers,
butterflies, zigzag lines that represent the “Triplet” mountains to decorate
her baskets and often incorporates her mother’s hallmark pattern, an
interpretation of an image she saw on a freeway overpass, called the
“freeway” or “wave” pattern in her baskets. Tim cones are attached to
the ends of buckskin fringe on her burden baskets, something her mother has been
credited for reintroducing in the 1950’s and 1960’s.
Cecilia Nelson Henry (1902 – 1996) made her first basket when she was
six and continued making them until she was 89. Her grandmother raised her and a
cousin after their mothers died. Their grandmother did not have a home and
traveled by horse, camping in the mountains around San Carlos with the girls.
Not wanting them to be sent to boarding school, she hid them and they were
continually on the move. They would stay in a place, for a few days, make
baskets, and then move on. When she found sumac willows in the mountains she
would make baskets and trade for food and supplies with the army camps in the
area. She would go down alone, leaving the girls behind, and bring the food
back. The girls dutifully observed ho baskets used to the designs she
incorporated. Authorities finally caught up with them when the girls were in
their teens and sent them to boarding school. Cecilia was able to leave school
only after an arranged marriage to Robert Henry. She and her husband had nine
children ---- five girls and four boys. Four of her daughters carry on the
basket weaving tradition and have received recognition for their work.
Evalena feels it is important to carry on her mother’s work and keep
the tradition of basket weaving alive, otherwise, “Our art would die. On other
reservations, the artists that used to make the baskets are gone, they’re
looking for somebody who still can pick it up again, or keep it going. We have a
lot of reservations like that.”
She has taught at the Taos Art Institute (New Mexico) and at the many
different reservations including Camp Verde in Arizona and she was awarded the
2001 National Heritage Fellowship in the Folk and Traditional Arts from the
National Endowment for the Arts. Different
Tribes often ask her to weave special baskets for official purposes. Many people
collect Evalena’s baskets. She has won numerous awards and is widely
recognized for her work.

Images: Courtesy of Evalena Henry all rights reserved, Copyright © 2005 - 2008.