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Northwest Coast art - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Northwest Coast art

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Northwest Coast art is the term commonly applied to a style of art created primarily by artists from Tlingit, Haida, Tsimshian, Kwakwaka'wakw, Nuu-chah-nulth and other First Nations and Native American tribes of the Northwest Coast of North America, from pre-European-contact times up to the present.

Totem Poles, a type of Northwest Coast art
Totem Poles, a type of Northwest Coast art

Contents

[edit] Distinguishing characteristics

Northwest Coast art is distinguished by the use of form lines, and the use of characteristic shapes referred to as ovoids, U forms and S forms. Before European contact, the most common media were wood (often Western red cedar), stone, and copper; since European contact, paper, canvas, glass, and precious metals have also been used. If paint is used, the most common colours are red and black, but yellow is also often used, particularly among Kwakwaka'wakw artists.[1]

The patterns depicted include natural forms such as bears, ravens, eagles, and humans; legendary creatures such as thunderbirds and sisiutls; and abstract forms made up of the characteristic Northwest Coast shapes. Totem poles are the most well-known artifacts produced using this style. Northwest Coast artists are also notable for producing characteristic "bent-corner" or "bentwood" boxes, masks, and canoes. Northwest Coast designs were also used to decorate traditional First Nations household items such as spoons, ladles, baskets, hats, and paddles; since European contact, the Northwest Coast art style has increasingly been used in gallery-oriented forms such as paintings, prints and sculptures.

[edit] History

After European contact, in the late 18th century, the peoples who produced Northwest Coast art suffered huge population losses due to diseases such as smallpox, and cultural losses due to assimilation into European-North American culture. The production of their art dropped drastically as well.

Toward the end of the 19th century, Northwest Coast artists began producing work for commercial sale, such as small argillite carvings. The end of the 19th century also saw large-scale export of totem poles, masks and other traditional art objects from the region to museums and private collectors around the world. Some of this export was accompanied by financial compensation to people who had a right to sell the art, and some was not.

In the early 20th century, very few First Nations artists in the Northwest Coast region were producing art. A tenuous link to older traditions remained in artists such as Charles Gladstone and Mungo Martin. The mid-20th century saw a revival of interest and production of Northwest Coast art, due to the influence of artists and critics such as Bill Reid, a grandson of Charles Gladstone. It also saw an increasing demand for the return of art objects that were illegally or immorally taken from First Nations communities. This demand continues to the present day. Today, there are numerous art schools teaching formal Northwest Coast art of various styles, and there is a growing market for new art in this style.[2]

[edit] Cultural appropriateness

This mural on the front of the Juneau, Alaska, city hall shows a scene from Northwest Coast mythology.
This mural on the front of the Juneau, Alaska, city hall shows a scene from Northwest Coast mythology.

Although neighbouring peoples such as the Salish nations also traditionally produced art which shares some of the characteristics of Northwest Coast art, these styles of art are not usually included in the term, since the patterns and artifacts produced are rather different. For example, Salish peoples traditionally created standing welcome figures not created by other Northwest Coast peoples, did not traditionally create totem poles, and did not traditionally use the form lines and shapes of other Northwest Coast peoples.[3] One corollary of this fact is that — contrary to popular belief — other than some of the peoples of the Olympic Peninsula, no native American nations of Washington and Oregon states produced totem poles and other characteristic, formal-line, Northwest Coast-style art objects before European contact.[4]

Traditionally, within a given community, some patterns and motifs could be used only by certain families and lineages, or with the agreement of those families and lineages. Today in British Columbia it is generally acknowledged that only First Nations artists of the appropriate nation have the moral right to produce art of given types and using given motifs. Some non-Native artists, such as John Livingston, have been adopted into First Nations and have thus formally acquired the right to produce such art.[1] In some Nations such as the Haida adoptions are simply seen as gestures and claims to produce work are viewed as economic and cultural appropriation.

[edit] Notable Northwest Coast art people

Notable Northwest Coast artists of the 19th century include Charles Edenshaw, who is widely acknowledged as a master of the form and an ancestor of Guujaaw, aka Gary Edenshaw, another notable carver and also Haida politica leader. Other notable Northwest Coast artists of the 20th century include Mungo Martin, Ray Peck, Bill Reid, Robert Davidson, Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, Roy Henry Vickers, Don Yeomans, Freda Diesing and Tony Hunt. Up and coming 21st century artists include David R. Boxley, Andy Everson, and Nathaniel P. Wilkerson. Notable critics of northwest Northwest Coast include Bill Holm, Bill Reid, Hilary Stewart and Dr George MacDonald.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Bill Holm, Northwest Coast Indian Art: An Analysis of Form. University of Washington Press, Seattle, 1965
  2. ^ Jonathan Meuli. Shadow House: Interpretations of Northwest Coast Art ISBN 905823083X
  3. ^ Hilary Stewart. Looking at Totem Poles. Douglas & McIntyre, Vancouver/Toronto, 1993
  4. ^ Hilary Stewart,Looking at Indian Art of the Northwest Coast. Douglas & McIntyre, Vancouver/Toronto, 19795

5. Marjorie M. Halpin, Totem Poles: An Illustrated Guide. University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, 1981.

6. Judith Ostrowitz. Privileging the Past. University of Washington Press ISBN 0295978147

7. Aldona Jonaitis, Franz Boas. A Wealth of Thought: Franz Boas on Native American Art ISBN 0295973250

[edit] External links


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