Featured Amazing NA Basket Museum

Discussion in 'Tribal Art' started by Potteryplease, Jul 4, 2022.

  1. Potteryplease

    Potteryplease Well-Known Member

    Near the coastal town of Klamath, California, in the far northwest part of the state, close to the Yurok Nation, is the tourist attraction "Trees of Mystery." A 50' talking statue of Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox greet the many tourists who stop in here, including me yesterday.

    Here you can walk in huge redwood trees (which are all around the area) and take a 'skywalk' higher in the trees' canopy. Fair enough.

    But in the back of the gift shop, past the coffee cups and the T-shirts, the house-made fudge and the stuffed animals, is a magnificent private collection of Native American artifacts and artworks. Chiefly collected by Marylee Thompson Smith, wife of one of the men who developed the tourist attraction, the museum is the most amazing collections of baskets I've ever seen. It's totally free, almost an afterthought compared to the other 'attractions.' There was only a couple people in it. The line for the Paul Bunyan burger, on the other hand, was long indeed...

    I post these eye-candy pics just to share. Truly, it's amazing.

    33602EE2-24D3-4FCA-81CF-8ACC00BD0913.jpeg 7566881B-1C24-4E99-AF9B-76A74B57E1B8.jpeg 1B40CE6B-706E-4F65-B0C8-5EE48B053C83.jpeg 79AF1A73-A102-4EF6-825B-16745C57EC56.jpeg BA0F5425-8D7A-406F-B53F-0FD35587B616.jpeg A04229DF-D44C-4E06-8FF6-F4C8BA444588.jpeg FCF59696-1161-498D-B952-42C469AED815.jpeg 8984FFBE-2BEA-4A6F-B1C3-8CF755FD078D.jpeg D18E3DEF-9640-47CB-BCF4-DEF32CFE1C8C.jpeg 02D3D253-7B07-40CA-A325-07ACB79F860F.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2022
  2. Potteryplease

    Potteryplease Well-Known Member

    Part 2:

    C728CA6A-786D-49D0-B05D-2935FF209E01.jpeg 20285A9E-9728-448F-A1FF-44972764AAD8.jpeg 0DFB75E5-9210-4E54-AD78-8CFAB8E02864.jpeg 11880E6E-9BC4-4D80-83E4-08D198AF1BDD.jpeg 5E3EB7CE-08D0-4649-BF6B-C282CE0A9E86.jpeg 14C8FF3F-2AA5-4043-BA78-53BC577BB432.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2022
    all_fakes, elarnia, Aquitaine and 8 others like this.
  3. Potteryplease

    Potteryplease Well-Known Member

  4. Potteryplease

    Potteryplease Well-Known Member

    Is this too many pics????

    218A69A0-23AB-4027-847D-2DBCAF78AFFE.jpeg F95948D5-0B83-4388-B2C5-1A27E4A273F4.jpeg B8B4D9E3-3F6F-4F4A-96AE-B99DA2126A33.jpeg B54FB581-B209-48F6-8DDE-173D471640DF.jpeg

    Phew... that's it. My phone is gonna have a nervous breakdown after all that.

    Enjoy this virtual museum tour! I know I did.
     
  5. wlwhittier

    wlwhittier Well-Known Member

    Stunning, and deeply moving. Thanks...

    To think of what was, and is no more...the talent, the cultures, the history...and the tears, and the blood.
     
  6. LauraGarnet02

    LauraGarnet02 Well-Known Member

    Thankyou for the fabulous tour. I took my time and soaked each picture in. So many things to look at. That woven rattle snake was a real surprise! What a collection of top notch quality work here.
     
  7. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    That hits where I live !!
    That's a real hidden gem .......
    Thanks for the memories............;):happy::happy:

    and just to be mildly vulgar........ there's over a million dollars worth of artifacts there....!
     
  8. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    Not at all! Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful.
    Such a huge and amazing collection, and privately collected too! Thank you so much for showing us, Pottery.:happy:

    And on the top shelf an Apache Gan dancer for @bosko69 , to the left of it a Gan dancer's mask/headdress:

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2022
  9. judy

    judy Well-Known Member

    Magnificent!
     
  10. pearlsnblume

    pearlsnblume Well-Known Member

    Thanks for sharing. So interesting to see everything.
     
  11. smallaxe

    smallaxe Well-Known Member

    Wonderful photos. Thanks for sharing those. Every photo has stunning items, but my personal favorites were the ones that had the women's clothing and all the brain tan leather, beadwork, quillwork, and the elk teeth.
     
  12. Gus Tuason

    Gus Tuason Well-Known Member

    What a wonderful collection! I visited "Trees of Mystery" in 1978 and this attraction was either not there or I somehow missed it. If, I'm ever back in this area I will certainly make it a "must see".:wideyed::blackeye::bored::cyclops::playful::watching:;)
     
  13. Northern Lights Lodge

    Northern Lights Lodge Well-Known Member

    Those are absolutely marvelous! Thanks for the wonderful photos!
    Leslie
     
  14. Aquitaine

    Aquitaine Is What It IS! But NEVER BORED!

    What a STUNNING and AWESOME collection!!!! When you said "Private" collection, someone went to a LOT of effort if it's ONE individual doing the collecting!!!! YOUR photos are WONDERFUL as well!!!! THANK YOU for showing us!!!!:):):):singing::singing::singing::singing::singing:
     
  15. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Good Lord-this looks more like the Smithsonian ! I've driven by the Trees of Mystery roadside attraction so many times-Mimbres pottery,nuts !
     
  16. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Christies and Sothebys (and every Museum in the country,world) are drooling for this stuff.Not the Trees,but the Museum of Mysteries-how the hell did this stuff end up in Klamath ?...there's a book in this story.
     
    Potteryplease likes this.
  17. Satin In A Coffin

    Satin In A Coffin Well-Known Member

    Never too many pictures, impossible! There is so much eye candy, one hardly knows where to look first. Thank you for sharing.
     
  18. elarnia

    elarnia SIWL

    Very Cool! Thanks!
     
    Potteryplease and komokwa like this.
  19. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    This is cut from the Trees of Mystery website-

    The End of the Trail Collection is attached to the north end of the Trees of Mystery gift shop and is one of the largest privately owned world class Collections there is.
    What you see in our Collection is the culmination of a dream that began over 30 years ago.
    The mission and scope of the End of The Trail Private Collection could hardly be explained any better than they were in the words of Marylee Thompson Smith, the main collector and person most responsible for its existence, spoken on the day it opened, on March 10, 1968:
    “Dear Friends, Welcome! What you see here in our Collection is the culmination of a dream that began over 30 years ago when I became interested in the ancient and modern cultures of our “First Americans”.

    I guess Museum quality artifacts were affordable during The Depression (She started Her collection in 1938). Maybe Marylee just put ads in newspapers of the time-'Gunther's Island Slave Killers Wanted-will buy one or a thousand items-cash paid'.
    I dearly hope they have a 'Mission Impossible' level security system protecting this irreplaceable collection.
     
  20. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    there's a thermometer with the Tlingit stuff......I'm sure the collection is in good hands..
     
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