Native American Art and Arch. - Unit 4
Terms
undefined, object
copy deck
- Basis to Lakota cosmology
-
-Nomadic lifestyle
-Merges with modern physics
-"Something that moves moves"
-taku skan skan - Western cosmology
-
-Entire universe in motion
-Creation
1. from a primal rock that squeezed out its own blue blood
2. made water and dome of heavens
-4 winds (4 young brothers)
1. led to spatial and temporal ordering
-Sense of place is tied ideas about cosmic generation
1. but this view is an exception to the stereotype
-Most common is fringe clothing and feather bonnett - Dates of fringe clothing and feater bonnett
- 1700-1870 ce
- How Lakota cosmology is like Iroquois and Hopi worldviews
-
1. mapped into spatial zones - sky, earth's surface, and realms beneath
2. 4 cardinal directions (4 winds)
3. axis - linked to Sun dance pole
4. sense of transfer of power between spiritual beings and humans
5. sense of emergence from earth (primal rock)
6. similar in ritual - humans will impersonate and personify spiritual forces - How Lakota cosmology is dislike Iroquois and Hopi worldviews
-
1. Lakota's view of the entire universe being in motion
2. Less emphasis on aspects of cosmology related to settled community life - ie: emphasis on moral order, good/bad in Iroquois Plains cosmology is overlooked more often that Pueblo and NE obscured by warrior image - Plains parallels with Eastern Woodlands
-
1. in lower Missouri and burial mounds
2. also had clay figurines and hopewell style pottery
3. also had some agriculture in the river valleys of the Plains
4. settlements of pit houses and sod roofs - Plains differences with the East
-
1. Never built platform mounds
2. Never had complex social hierarchies - 2 elements of European life that transformed life on the Plains
- Horse and guns
- Date horses introduced to Plains
- early 18th c (introduced by Spanish 200 yrs. earlier)
- Date guns introduced to Plains
- arrived with fur trade: 17th, 18th, and 19th c.
- Revolution of the horse culture began
-
-began 1700
-Apache and Navajo acquired horses from Spanish and traded them wiht neighbors to the North
-hunting societies became more active
-enabled communities to grow in size
-competing for access to the herds - State of war
- 1860s adn 1870s
- Rivals because of herd competition
-
1. Eastern Sioux vs. Ojibwa
2. Western Sioux vs. Crow
3. Cheyenne, Arapacho, Lakota (allies) vs. Earth-lodge dwellers of river valleys - Lewis and Clark exploration
- early 19th c.
- California Gold Rush
- 1849 - severe disruption of hunting patterns
- Extinction of buffalo
-
Defeated the Plains people
- 1878-southern herd gone
- 1880/1881-northern herd gone
*Plains life lasted only about 150 years - Date of Spanish settlement in California
- 18th c.
- Date of Europe-American migration
- 19th c.
- How did contact with Europeans drastically affect Plains arts?
-
-Led to a diminution of arts for ceremony
-by mid-19th c. many arts were for exchange w/ whites - Great Plains - 1700s
-
Algonquian speakers came from north of the Great Lakes
1. Cheyenne
2. Arapaho
3. Blackfeet
followed by:
4. Plains Cree
5. Ojibwa - Great Plains - 1800s
- Sioux moved westward across
- Earth lodge dwellers
-
1. Pawnee, oto, osage, iowa (lower missouri)
2. arikara, mandan, hidatsa (upper missouri) - settled tribes
- Mandan and Hidatsa
- Nomadic tribes
- Lakota and Crow - follow buffalo
- Plains geography
-
Miss. river to Rocky Mts.
Southern Canada to Mexican border - Crow patterns
- graphic - blue is common, outlined in white. bold, goemetric
- Lakota patterns
- Uses solid background color
- Old man coyote
- first to dress horses (Crow)
- Lewis and Clark
- 1804
- Men's art
-
1. chronicling events
2. began with pictographs
3. narrative scenes on buffalo hide robes and shields
4. or images from visions as in the Great Lakes
5. Band histories (winter counts)
6. medicine wheels - Medicine wheels
-
-Earthworks
-giant,round,solar symbols from boulders
-used for ceremonial centering
-may be 3,000 years old
-used to mark solstice
-Sun dance
-ritual pole - axis at center of the world
-dance enclosure - made of tree limbs and branches
-mortification in sacrificial rights - Sun Dance
-
-combines celebration,fulfillment of vows
-if you prove your worth through self-sacrifice, you receive strenfth and protection in battle - Pipe bundles
-
sacred pipes that sustained a whole tribe
-cared for by pipe keepers - Pipe keepers
- holy men who had the bundle's rituals and would pass teh bundle and its ceremony to a younger member
- Male roles more public in these cultures
- Mandan, Kiowa, and Cheyenne
- Years of increased contact
- after civil war in 1860s
- Increased contact in Plains
-
-forcible resettlement
-end of seasonal migration and warrior societies (men hardest hit)
-more dependent on whites due to extinction - reservation era - men's art
-
-cultural upheaval
-mens artistic traditions in rapid decline - no war shirts or sacred shields
-no paintings - a strong need to document traditional life
-pictoral histories in small books
-some scouts commis. to make drawings - Fort Marion
-
Cheyenne and Kiowa
-drawings were more detailed, perspective, landscape settings, showed daily lives of imprisonment - Arthur Amiotte
- makes collages based on this tradition
- reservation era - women's art
-
-flourished, enforced leisure - lots of beadwork (symbols of ethnicity, tradition)
-more lavish design
-non-traditional items such as suitcases, handbags
-intro of trade cloth, ribbon... (calico, men's tailored suits, huge variety of clothing styles, forced by loss of buffalo) - Sun dance banned
- 1883 to 'civilize' indians
- Powwow began
- July 4th celebration became common
- Ghost movement
-
late 19th c.
-religious visions of prophet Wovoka, medicine man: live peacefully and world would revert, whites would disappear, included recognition of a messiah - Clothing of Sun dance and ghost movement
- beautifully painted - belief in power against bullets
- Wounded Knee
- Dec. 1890:The end of an era, Lakota, 200 participants massacred
- Persistence of vision
-
-Crow fair in Montana
-Lakota quillwork
-powwow as competitive dance
-some revival of sun dance
-beading - Metis
- mixed race: scottish, english, french, with cree and ojibwa
- Metis art
-
-skilled embroiderers
-instruction at missionary schools (floral imagery predominant)
-influences: combine Euro and indigenous modes - stylistic fusion
-eagerly acquired by traders, travellers, and indians - Big foot memorial ride
-
December 1990, South Dakota
-2 weeks to travel the 250 miles
-1000 years ago, roamed from Canada to Yellowstone river to Rocky mts - Sioux name
- mistranslation of Ojibwa meaning "enemy"
- Year gold miners invaded black hills
- 1872
- The hostiles
- Lakota ancestors who refused to give up their way of life
- Year government took black hills
- 1876
- Year of Fort Laramie Treaty
- 1868
- Wovoka's vision
-
1989 - there will be suffering for 7 generations, but after the 7th generation there will be rebirth. promised peace and happiness
-ghost dance movement - Year Lewis and Clark invaded plateau region
- 1805
- 1st catch ceremony (plateau region)
- ceremony when caught first salmon in the spring
- gifts of marriage ceremony (plateau region)
- woman's family gave salmon, man's family gave a horse
- "I will fight no more forever"
- Famous words of Chief Joseph, leader of Nez Perce tribe)
- Oliver Howard
- Found Howard University in D.C.- one of the first all black universities)
- Plateau and California and great basin geography
- 400 miles wide - froom cascades in W. Washington, north to B.C., east to Idaho and MT, south to CA
- crossroads region
- some area of plateau region is more costal, some more plains
- Great Basin
- seperates California from the east
- By this time the plateau region was a tourist commodity
- 19th c.
- Plateau art
-
1.basketry - highly varied, coil cedar root-klikitat, tule reed mats-yakima
2.flat twined bags-yakima, nez perce, cayuse, umatilla-called corn husk bags. diff design on each side
3.style similar to plains geometric style, intro in plant fibre - Pomo
-
far west tribe (6 villages N. of SF)- very proficient basketmakers
1.relies on rhythmic repetition
2.complex rotational geometry
3.art began to die in late 19th/early 20th c., but sold to outsiders. wealthy patrons emerged-offered annual support
4.basketry observed by drakes crew in 16th c. - Pomo feathered baskets
-
marked life stages
1. new mother received a red feather basket, then presented to mother-in-law
2. first bath in basket with shell beads
3. adolescents confined during first menstruation also received fine baskets that they would eat and drink from and keep throughout their life
4. gift exchange at marriage - man offered shelles, woman offered baskets
5. baskets cremated with body at death
6. individuals were judged by quality and quantities of their baskets - Washoe baskets
- found in Great Basin and Western Nevada - hunter gatherer culture
- discovery of gold, game supply reduced, men became ranch hands;women domesticss. lake tahoe a resort
- 1858
- Washoe bskts - commodity market
- 1895-1935, led to noted artists
- Degikup design
-
tightly coiled, designs woven in, often an incurving rim
ie:Louisa Keyser - Cosmology of the North
-
1.belief in shamanistic transformation
2.perched on the shaman are small birds and mammals, on his head is a small spirit helper
3.essential bond b/w humans and spirit animals - Shaman
-
1. a doctor wo diagnosed illnesses and prescribed for the sick
2. interpreted unknown forces that controlled food supply (a rainmaker mask, understand or affect natural/spiritual forces)
3. architect of the ritual dances that were the point of contact b/w people and spirits - Becoming a shaman
- was a man/woman who had been atypical or psychotic in behavior as a child - channaled into role of a shaman, could also become a shaman later in life
- Who saw spirits? (north cosmology)
- anyone could see spirits, but shaman saw them clearly and more often
- Where did a shaman work?
- in dimly lit room while drumming and chanting, rattling could cover up his conversation with a spirit
- Shaman tricks
-
1. Could survive burns, thrown bound by hand and foot into the sea, or speared through the stomach without a mark
2. Believed he could also transform himself into an animal - had power of collective beliefs b/c the performance usually grew out of sickness or poor hunting - Shaman masks
- a way of interpreting spirits that the shaman contacted during trances. Were symbols of balance b/w all natural forces
- Shaman clothing
- wore carved amulets and distinctive clothing for public performances that testified to their powers and visionary experiences.
- yup'ik artists
- depicted the mystical journeys of shamans in carved and painted masks that have been greatly admired by many Western art lovers, especially during the 1930s and 40s
- Alaskan eskimo houses
- Built houses large enough to accommodate the entire populations of one or two villages to house the dances
- eskimo maskmaking
-
1. after contact with the west, stopped making them for ceremonial purposes.
2. began carving them w/o eye holes for touristic decor
3. also stopped b/c of the inundation of white religious belief - the sacred artform depended on belief to continue - Subarctic zone
-
1.from Cook Inlet in West
2.to southern shores of Hudson and James bays
3.Boreal forest and TAIGA
4.short growing season
5.but rich w/ animals,plants,fish - Arctic zone
-
1.north of the tree line
2.humans as far north as northern greenland
3.herds of oxen and caribou
4.reliance on seals,walrus,wale
5.coastal populations - Sub-arctic popuation
- populated about 12,000 years ago
- Arctic population
- populated about 4,000 years ago
- Links to Siberia
- eskimo tied to Chukchi and Evenk of NE Siberia
- Arctic language
-
1. the eskimo - Aleut group
2. aleut and yup'ik as distinct branches
3. yup'ik also found on Chukchi peninsula in Siberia - Arctic Names
-
Alaska - Eskimo
Canada - Inuit - Sub-arctic languages
-
East: Crees are Algonquian
West: speak Athapaskan - Sub-arctic names
-
U.S. - athapaskan
Canada - Dene - 1st contact with the Inuit
- Sir Martin Frobisher, 1576
- Russian settlement
- in SW Alaska - 1741
- Danes and Norwegians (north)
- settled in Greenland, 18th c.
- Jesuit missionaries (north)
- Eastern Cree county, early 17th c.
- Hudson's Bay trading posts (north)
- Later in 17th c.
- 20th c. changes in North
- Gold, minerals, oil
- North post WWII (north)
-
1. permanent settlement
2. residential schools
3. disease
4. depenency - Klonkike gold rush (north)
-
1890 - accelerated contact
many souvenirs, developed more intricate and detailed engravings - women wove whale baleen baskets by this date (north)
- 1915
- crafts become more standardized (north)
- 1920s - dolls, bracelets
- modern tech and consumerism began to have effects (north)
- mid-20th c.
- "Sons of the wind"
-
photo of 4 pillars
1992, Colleen Cutschall (lakota) - photo of man's war shirt
- Lakota artists 1870
- photo of 3 braded cradles
- 1990, Kiowa artists
- Photo of tipi
-
1980s Kiowa artist
Black Leggings tipi of the Kiowa warrior society - photo of painted buffalo robe
- Mandan artist 1800
- detailed picture of interior of earthlodge
- After karl bodmer, 1836-43
- photo of horse effigy dance stick
- Lakota, 1880s
- "Between 2 worlds"
-
Wohaw (1855-1924), Kiowa
pencil and crayon drawing - black and white photo of twined bag
- Nez Perce artist, 1910
- photo of baskets
- Louisa Keyser, Washoe (1850-1925)
- photo of feathered basket
- Mary Posh (pomo) dates 1905
- picture of red war shield with man painted in middle
- Arapoosh (sore belly), crow 1820
- black and white photo of beaded horse collar
- Crow artist, 1890-1900