Matilda Borden liked to pour a cup of tea to display her basket making expertise, proving her cups made from material gathered in British Columbia91裸聊视频檚 forests were watertight, says her granddaughter Brenda Crabtree.
Not one drop would leak, recalls Crabtree, who is also a basket-making artist and Aboriginal programs director at Emily Carr University of Art and Design in Vancouver.
91裸聊视频淪he was showing off and it91裸聊视频檚 really, truly the mark of a master weaver,91裸聊视频 she said of her grandmother who died in 1975.
Among First Nations, basket weavers have always been held in high regard, said John Haugen of the Nlaka91裸聊视频檖amux Nation from B.C.91裸聊视频檚 Fraser Canyon.
91裸聊视频淚f you were a good basket maker and somebody else wanted your baskets they would have food to trade with you or other items.91裸聊视频
Now the baskets are gaining more notice than just being functional works of art.
Canada recognized Nlaka91裸聊视频檖amux basket making for its national historic significance this month with a ceremony at Lytton, about 265 kilometres northeast of Vancouver.
91裸聊视频淗istoric designations reflect Canada91裸聊视频檚 rich and varied history and I encourage all Canadians to learn more about Nlaka91裸聊视频檖amux basket making and its important contributions to Canada91裸聊视频檚 heritage,91裸聊视频 said Jati Sidhu, Mission-Matsqui-Fraser Canyon MP, on behalf of Catherine McKenna, the minister responsible for Parks Canada.
Andrea Laforet, retired director of ethnology and cultural studies at the Canadian Museum of Civilization, said the making, use and trading of coiled basketry has been part of the history of the Indigenous Peoples of the southern Interior of B.C. and parts of Washington state for centuries, if not thousands of years.
91裸聊视频淟ike many of the utilitarian objects made in Indigenous societies in B.C., they are also works of art,91裸聊视频 said Laforet, who attended the ceremony in Lytton.
The baskets served as vital trade commodities for Indigenous Peoples in the Fraser Canyon area before and following contact with non-Indigenous people, Haugen said.
91裸聊视频淲e knew we were prolific basket makers and our baskets were traded outside of our nation prior to contact,91裸聊视频 said Haugen, who said war canoes from Vancouver Island made the voyage up the Fraser River to Spuzzum on trade missions.
The baskets made by Nlaka91裸聊视频檖amux women provided economic support for families and communities from about 1850 to 1930 when they were traded in nearby non-Indigenous communities, he said.
Today, the baskets are on display in museums around the world and are coveted pieces at auctions, said Haugen, whose aunts were well-known basket makers, and his mother was an avid collector who often helped local people sell their work to collectors.
Borden was also part of the Nlaka91裸聊视频檖amux Nation, and Crabtree said some of her earliest memories are of helping her grandmother harvest, process and weave cedar roots and bark into baskets.
91裸聊视频淚 love the fact that this form of basketry has been recognized as really, truly, technically amazing,91裸聊视频 she said.
She said the baskets served as items for cooking, storing and transporting food as well as being expressions of art by local women.
91裸聊视频淲e never really developed a pottery complex in the northwest coast because we didn91裸聊视频檛 need it,91裸聊视频 she said. 91裸聊视频淧eople think how can you cook with just a cedar root basket? Well, you fill them with water and put hot rocks from fires into the basket. It would steam the food.91裸聊视频
Crabtree said her most recent works of basketry include cultural commentary woven into the object. She said one of her baskets includes the residential school policy statement: 91裸聊视频滽ill the Indian in the child.91裸聊视频
91裸聊视频淚91裸聊视频檓 really using our baskets now as a vehicle for a discussion related to aboriginal identity and contemporary issues,91裸聊视频 she said. 91裸聊视频淭hey can hold water, cook, and have an added message.91裸聊视频
Retired ethnobotanist Nancy Turner, who wrote extensively about Interior basket making, said the baskets embodied the lifestyle of the Interior peoples.
91裸聊视频淭hey say if you are making a basket you should never be in a bad mood,91裸聊视频 she said. 91裸聊视频淵ou should never get angry. You should be of good mind because the basket you are making will pick up on your own sense of well being.91裸聊视频
Turner said students soon learned her courses in basket making were not as easy as imagined.
91裸聊视频淧eople will sometimes talk about 91裸聊视频楤asket Making 10191裸聊视频 if you91裸聊视频檙e taking a simple course at university, but when I taught ethnobotany at University of Victoria, I had the students do a making-things project,91裸聊视频 she said. 91裸聊视频淭he students soon learned it91裸聊视频檚 not at all simple.91裸聊视频
Dirk Meissner, The Canadian Press
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