small basket with lid, unrecorded Haudenosaunee or Mi'kmaq artist

Artwork Overview

small basket with lid, late 1800s–early 1900s
Where object was made: Canada or United States
Material/technique: velvet; sweetgrass; weaving; split ash; dyeing
Dimensions:
Object Height/Diameter (Height x Diameter): 8 x 12.5 cm height with lid
Object Height/Diameter (Height x Diameter): 3 1/8 x 4 15/16 in
Credit line: Source unknown
Accession number: 2007.2561.a,b
Not on display

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Images

Label texts

This small basket tells a surprisingly complex story about Indigenous peoples’ relationships with the environment, economic development, and heritage revitalization. The basket’s materials reflect the diversity of the local environment, with the ash splints coming from the forests and the sweetgrass from coastal wetlands.

In recent generations, sweetgrass and ash baskets have played an important role in cultural heritage revitalization efforts among Northeastern tribes. Basket-making has been a major focus of cultural programs that connect elders and youth to teach traditional arts and help with language preservation. Unfortunately, inter-tribal communities have also had to come together to halt the forces that threaten their access to basket-making materials. Ash trees are in danger from both deforestation and attacks from pests, and construction developments have destroyed or prevented access into long-standing sweetgrass harvesting sites, making traditional materials increasingly scarce.

Exhibitions

Cassandra Mesick Braun, curator
Kate Meyer, curator
Angela Watts, curator
2021