Lakota Pasqueflower - 5x7 print

pasqueflowerlakotasquare1.jpg
pasqueflowerlakota5x7printweb.jpg
pasqueflowerlakotasquare1.jpg
pasqueflowerlakota5x7printweb.jpg

Lakota Pasqueflower - 5x7 print

$14.00

Pasqueflower, Wind flower, Wild Crocus, Prairie Smoke~ she is one of the first blooms to welcome Spring to the plains and foothills 💜 Downy silver hairs on her stems, leaves, and petals glow in the sunlight ✨💜✨

Pulsatilla hirutissima is the state flower of South Dakota, and a little more purple-hued than Colorado's blue-violet Pulsatilla patens 💜 Her Dakhóta name is hokski-chekpa wahcha, meaning "twin flower". In "Song of the Twin Flower", she speaks as a grandmother to her grandchildren. She has come out first of all the flower people to show that Spring is here. By the time later flowers open, her blooms will be replaced by a hairy-looking gray seed head:
I wish to encourage the children
Of other flower nations now appearing
All over the face of the earth;
So while they awaken from sleeping
And come up from the heart of the earth
I am standing here old and grey-headed.

Her Lakhóta name is Hokšíčhekpa, or "child's navel", as her plump buds resemble a newborn's navel. She is also called Uŋčí Waȟčá, or "Grandmother Flower". There is a story that once, pasqueflower blooms were only white. One day in late winter, a young man went to a hill to pray. He was cold and lonely, and as it became dark, he wrapped his robe tightly around himself. He heard a little voice call out, a little white flower, wrapped in his robe, thanking him for the warm embrace. Over the days of his quest, the flower encouraged him, and assured him that he would have his vision. After he left, the flower shivered again in the cold. Creator looked down, was pleased with the flower, and offered her a gift. She said that she enjoyed the warmth of the bison robe, that she loved the colors of sunrise and twilight, and the warmth of the sun. Creator gifted her a robe of her own, painted her dress purple, and her heart gold as the sun. She sings courage to all the other flowers of the new season and reminds them not to fear their time, but to rejoice because their spirits will go on to color the rainbows.

This is a 5×7” giclee print of my original painting, Lakota Pasqueflower. It’s printed with archival ink on thick, textured cotton rag paper, signed on the back, packaged in a protective sleeve with backing board, and ready for a standard-size frame.

Archival prints are shipped in a flat envelope through USPS Priority Mail.

Quantity:
Add To Cart