Zuni Pueblo Indian Three Corn Maiden Pin Pendant by Chad Quandelacy & Valerie Comosona. Our fetishes are handmade in New Mexico by Native American artists. This incredible three corn maiden maiden fetish pin pendant was carved by well known Zuni artist Chad Quandelacy & Valerie Comosona . The Quandelacy family creates some of the most elegant fetishes in Zuni. The Corn Maiden represents strength, creation, and wisdom. Chad carves the fetish and Valerie does the beautiful silver work. Chad has inlaid small coral, turquoise, marble and mother of pearl stones to enhance the very fine carving.
The Corn Maidens of Zuni personify the bounty of life giving corn that grows in six colors. The Seven maidens made corn seeds from rubbing the flesh off their body. Early on, insulted by the lascivious gyrations of the male dancers and flute players, the Corn Maidens fled to the land of everlasting summer. It is their breath that brings the rain and warm breezes of summer to the lands of winter. In the legend, the Corn Maidens return to dance when the corn is a foot high. In some legends the sisters perish in a fire that scorches the earth and in others, they become the seven stars of the Big Dipper. In Zuni mythology, the Corn Maidens are often dancing and the Zuni Molawai ritual dramatizes the loss and recovery of the Corn Maidens on the first day of the December Shalaka ceremony