Early life Evalena Henry was born a member of the
San Carlos Apache in
Peridot, Arizona. The daughter of Robert and Cecilia Henry, she first learned her tribe's basket weaving traditions from her mother, Cecilia Henry, a master of the craft. Cecilia Henry began making baskets in the 1950s, to prevent the traditions of the tribe from dying out. Evalena Henry first attended Rice School, on the
San Carlos Reservation, later attending the Globe School in
Globe, Arizona. As a girl, she worked hard to learn how to split willow to make baskets, the skill did not come naturally to her. Evalena became known for her intricate designs for these ceremonial
burden baskets, many of which utilize her mother's unique weave patterns. Henry uses different colored willow and cottonwood branches from the forests found in Arizona's
White Mountain Reservation for her basketry. Henry is also known for making
tus baskets, baskets that are used to traditionally carry water. Henry uses pinon pitch to ensure her baskets are watertight.
Recognition Henry has taught basketry at the Taos Art Institute and at the
Camp Verde reservation to ensure that her skills are not lost. In 2001, she was named a fellow by the National Endowment of the Arts. For her fellowship in Washington, DC, she would take her first trip by airplane. In 2005, she received an Eric and Barbara Dobkin Fellowship from the
School for Advanced Research. In 2006, she returned to Washington to demonstrate her basket weaving skills at the
Smithsonian Folklife festival. == References ==