1996; 9780930588809; Suzanne Abel-Vidor, Dot Brovarney, Susan Billy; 128 pages; Remember Your Relations: The Elsie Allen Baskets, Family & Friends; Grace Hudson Museum, 1996 The text of Remember Your Relations describes the lives of the various basketweavers, explaining their relationship to one another and the community which nurtured them. A wealth of archival photos collected from museums and families further deepens our understanding of the Indian community. Published in conjunction with the Grace Hudson Museum, City of Ukiah and the Oakland Museum of . More than one hundred baskets from the Elsie Allen collection. Final sale! Was $20.00, now $5.00. The Pomo Indians of Northern California are widely considered to be among the worldâ™s most skilled weavers, and no finer collection of their baskets exists than that created by Elsie Allen and her mother, Annie Burke. Online version: Abel-Vidor, Suzanne. Remember your relations. Ukiah, CA : Grace Hudson Museum ; [Oakland] : Oakland Museum of California ; Berkeley, Calif. : Heyday Books, ©1996 (OCoLC)607336831. Named Person: Elsie Comanche Allen; Elsie Comanche Allen; Elsie Comanche Allen. Document Type: Book. Allen, Elsie Comanche, -- 1899-1990 -- Friends and associates. Allen, Elsie Comanche, -- 1899-1990. Families. Friendship. Pomo baskets. Pomo women weavers. Confirm this request. (Remember Your Relations - The Elsie Allen Baskets, Family, and Friends, by Suzanne Abel-Vidor, Dot Brovarney, and Susan Billy). For centuries, when a Pomo woman died, her baskets were burned or buried with her. As a result, new weavers were unable to refer to their predecessorâ™s baskets for inspiration and instruction, and the people were losing their legacy as fewer and fewer people learned . Elsie Comanche Allen (1899-1990), was born in Sonoma County and was a longtime resident of Ukiah in Mendocino County. She began weaving as a child, but only devoted herself to weaving and Remember Your Relations has 1 rating and 1 review. Eric said: This is a collection of information about the basket collection of my great-grandmother. It... Start by marking âœRemember Your Relations: The Elsie Allen Baskets, Family & Friendsâ as Want to Read: Want to Read saving⦠Want to Read. Currently Reading. Read. Other editions. Enlarge cover. Remember Your Relations The Elsie Allen Baskets, Family & Friends, Dot Brovarney, Susan Billy, Jan 1, 1996, Art, 128 pages. Pomo Indian basketry ranks as a world-class art, and no more interesting collection exists than that created by Elsie Allen and her mother, Annie Burke, presented here in full . Pomo basketmaking a supreme art for the weaver, Elsie Allen, 1972, , 67 pages. - - A Supreme Art for the Weaver. Pomo grandmother and fourth generation basket weaver, Elsie Allen, who worked hard most of her life, found time in later years to teach the . Mihilakawna and Makahmo Pomo the Suzanne Abel-Vidor, Dot Brovarney, and Susan Billy Remember Your Relations: The Elsie Allen Baskets, Family & Friends pays tribute not just to baskets but also to those who created them. Photographs and information about more than 30 identified and unidentified weavers, gives us an under. Photographs and information about more than 30 identified and unidentified weavers, gives us an understanding of their lives, an insight into their relationships with each other, and a glimpse into the remarkable communities and culture from which they came. This book provides an introduction to those not familiar with Pomo basketry and inspiration to those already acquainted with this exceptional art. Features Annie Burke, and daughter Elsie Allen, and their basket collection. Also features Pomo Indian basket weavers Mary Arnold, Susie Billy, Rhonda Knight, Ethel Burke, Annie Lake, Laura Somersal, Suzanne Holder, Lydia Faught, Annie Boone, Mabel McKay, Solome Alcantra, Nora Cooper. A great book on Pomo indian baskets. Handbook of Yokuts Indians. by: Frank F. Latta 1978 hardbound, 765 pages Out of print Subject to availability, check for price. A wonderful book on Yokuts Indians and Yokuts Indian basketry. Features Yokuts Snake baskets, Yokuts Bottleneck baskets, Creation Baskets by Minnie W Elsie Allen. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to navigation Jump to search. Elsie Allen. Elsie Allen in 1975 in Covelo, California. Born. Elsie Comanche Allen (1899-09-22)September 22, 1899 California. Died. Together with Mabel McKay, Laura Somersal, Elsie Allen is regarded as one of the three best known California basketweavers of her generation.[7] Allen is the subject of several books, including Dot Brovarney, Susan Billy, and Suzanne Abel-Vidor's 2005 Remember Your Relations: Elsie Allen Baskets, Family, And Friends and Sandra J. Metzler's 1996 A promise kept: Basketry of the Pomo. and the Elsie Allen basket collection.[8]. Elsie Allen High School in Santa Rosa, California is named for her. [2]. Published work[edit]. lobasuhibi