The Provider and The Spearman, a Cunana Muñeca Couple
OBDP-010-007-PAIR
Handwoven by the Embera |★★★★★
A Life Worked Side by Side
The Provider and The Spearman were woven as a pair, and here they stay together. She wears a feathered crown and a colorful paruma, a gathering basket on her back; he stands beside her with braided earrings, a yellow loincloth, and a tall spear. Among the Emberá the woman is the provider and the man is survival. Side by side, they are a home.
Rosamelia Cunana and her mother, Señora de Cunana, are the only family still making these. Each figure is woven entirely by hand over about two months. The black designs are jagua body-painting patterns, the marks the Emberá wear on their own skin.
Details
Set: A couple, two figures sold together
Figures: The Provider (female) and The Spearman (male)
Dimensions: Each approx. 13 in tall × 3 in wide × 3 in deep (33 × 8 × 8 cm)
Materials: Chunga & nahuala palm fiber, natural dyes, cotton
Display: Two fitted black metal stands included
Origin: Handwoven in Sambú, Emberá Comarca, Darién, Panama
Makers: Rosamelia Cunana and her mother, Señora de Cunana
Technique: Coiled and hand-dyed
Edition: A one-of-a-kind pair. SKU OBDP-010-007-PAIR
Care: Dust with a soft dry cloth; keep away from direct sunlight and moisture
Shipping: Free within the continental US · ships in 1–3 business days
Returns: 14-day returns in original condition
Bought straight from the Cunana family in Panama’s Darién, picked out in person by Jen, at fair prices with no one in between.
- Two figures, each approx. 13 in tall x 3 in wide x 3 in deep (33 x 8 x 8 cm). Each stands on a fitted black metal stand.
- One-of-a-kind handwoven figure
- 1000's of stitches over weeks & months
- Traditional Embera weaving artistry
Handwoven in panama by
Emberá Tribe Craftsmen

No. of Artisansdozens of artists across multiple communities |
OriginRainforests of eastern Panama and northwestern Colombia |
Fairly Made. Community Driven.
Each Embera Animal mask is purchased directly from the artist at fair prices that support families, preserve tradition, and sustain local economies.
In the forest communities of Panama and Colombia, Emberá artisans create expressive woven masks inspired by the animals, spirits, and stories of the rainforest.
Using the same finely shredded palm fibers and natural vegetal dyes found in traditional Wounaan baskets, each mask is carefully shaped and woven entirely by hand.
These striking pieces transform traditional basketry techniques into sculptural forms, preserving a distinctive tradition of Indigenous woven art.