Totem pole carved by Mungo Martin |
There
is a place in Stanley Park in Vancouver where you can see some Indian
totem poles. They are quite nicely presented with a background of
tall trees. Grotesque faces smile at passers by. Boards in front
of them inform the styles of which tribe they were carved by and who
was the carver of each pole. Bill Reid created the pole in the Haida
style. Doug Cranmer carved the Kwakiutl pole. They bring a little
climate of old Indian cultures into a modern city, a little
presentation of what the Indians of this area do. Few people realise
that the culture that created totem poles is a thing of the past and
what we see today in city parks is just wooden echo of that past.
It
is true that Indians of British Columbia have carved totem poles for
a long time. The totem poles are mentioned by the first European
sailors who visited that coast in the 18th
century. Captain Cook was most famous of them but there were Russian
and Spanish sailors before him. One Russian captain even bragged that
when he entered a village he chopped down all the “pagan idols”.
He was later surprised that the Indians didn't like Russians except
when there were some Russian heads to be chopped off. Alejandro
Malaspina, a Spaniard, showed more understanding, his book published
in 1791 had illustrations showing huge wooden sculptures. John
Webber, a painter on board one of Cook's ships, painted interiors of
Indian houses with roof posts sculpted as grotesque faces.
The Spaniards claimed the whole coast north of California as theirs
but they weren't interested in trade. Russians wanted to trade but
they had problems getting friendly relations with the natives.
Captain Cook was very friendly towards the natives and one of the
effects of his visit was an explosion of the trade in furs. The
Indians had furs of sea otters which were very common in that area.
Cook knew that the sea otter fur was considered a luxury item in
China. The Indians not only didn't know how much they could get for
those furs in Canton. They didn't know that China existed. They knew
how to build beautiful boats that could go to sea, but they didn't go
very far, they had no idea that there was another continent far
beyond the horizon. They knew, however, that Cook (and the sailors
that came later) had iron tools, which were much more useful than
their own stone tools, so they exchanged their furs for iron tools.
The sailors later sold these furs in Canton for huge profits.
A silver bracelet made by Charles Edenshaw |
European
sailors who wanted to trade with those Indians had to communicate
with them somehow and they quickly found out that they don't speak
just one single language, even though they build similar houses and
carve similar totem poles. European travellers always classified
ethnic groups they met. This wasn't too difficult in they encountered
countries with more or less clear borders, a capital and a ruler who
would be obeyed throughout the country. In British Columbia there
were no countries in this sense, there was no political organisation
bigger than a village. A single village could even have more than one
chief because each clan would have their own chief. The Indians
inhabiting the coast from Alaska to Oregon shared a similar way of
life, similar beliefs and art but they spoke several different
languages. The European explorers classified those languages, gave
them names and groups of Indians that spoke one language they called
tribes. Thus the Indians living along the southern coast of Alaska
were named Tlingit, those living on the Queen Charlotte archipelago
were called Haida, those from the northern coast of British Columbia
were called Tsimshian, farther south lived the Kwakiutl, on the
western coast of Vancouver island lived the Nootka. Farther south, in
what is now the United States, lived the Chinook, whose language for
some reason became a lingua franca used in trade in the region.
However, these people themselves didn't feel any special solidarity
even if they spoke the same language, sometimes the neighbouring
villages fought bloody wars of extermination.
On the other hand the Indians of British Columbia didn't fight the
white newcomers. There were no wars of extermination or indeed any
other wars between the whites and Indians in the North-west. The
Indians nevertheless almost became extinct as a result of diseases
brought from overseas by friendly traders. The most lethal of them
was smallpox which in 1860s killed nearly 90% of the population. The
children of those who survived went to school and there they learned
that in the old days the Nootkas, Kwakiutl, Haidas and others lived
there. They kind of accepted it even though the languages mentioned
were quickly disappearing. I wrote “kind of accepted it” because
today some of those people question the names given to them by the
explorers. Thus the Kwakiutl (at least some of them) say they should
be called Kwakwak'awakl, the Nootkas prefer the name Nuu-chha-nulth.
The Haida didn't change the name but they ceased to fight one another
and created the Council of the Haida nation.
Miniature argilite totem pole |
The
great epidemics took place in 1860s but the preceding decades were
the golden age of totem pole carving. There are 19th
century photographs of villages full of totem poles but deserted as a
result of the terrible epidemics. Totem poles had clearly defined
functions, they weren't just sculptures standing anywhere. They were
always erected in winter villages. The Indians of this region lived
in several places, depending on the season. When salmon came up the
rivers to spawn they lived in temporary villages near the river,
during a whaling season the villages were near an open beach, whereas
the winter villages were located deep in fiords that sheltered them
from gales and blizzards. The 18th
century sailors already noticed that some totem poles adorned tombs
of great chiefs, others formed part of the front wall of houses whose
entry was through a gaping mouth of a carved creature, still others
stood indoors and served as pillars supporting the roof. According to
legends each clan descended from an animal and a totem pole
represented the mythical ancestor of the clan living in that house.
To complicate matters clans often overlapped and not only more than
one clan could live in a house, but one person could be a member of
more than one clan. Consequently totem poles often represented not
just one animal but several, one on the top of the other. Sometimes a
totem pole illustrated a mythical history of a clan. One can say that
a totem pole played a role similar to a coat of arms hanging over
agate of a mediaeval European castle – declared who the owners were
and informed visitors about their glorious past.
An
erection of a totem pole was accompanied by a great feast called (in
Chinook language) a potlatch. Similar feast was also a part of
funeral celebrations after passing away of a great chief. The body of
the chief was cremated and with him a few favourite slaves, who were
killed for the occasion. A wooden box with the ashes was placed on
the top of a carved pole. This pole was a sepulchre which was
supposed in time to decay and fall. A year after the great chief's
death another potlatch was held and a new free standing pole was
erected. Thus there were four types of totem poles: the ones that
stood indoors and supported the roof of the house; the ones that were
a part of the front wall and sometimes (though not always) formed the
entry; the sepulchres of great chiefs and free standing memorial
poles. But this was not all. Bas-reliefs that decorated partitions
inside the houses or wooden chests, painted decorations on boats or
walls, masks used in dances performed during potlatches – all this
impressed the white visitors. Some of them wanted to take a souvenir
with them. They could not take the whole totem pole but perhaps
somebody could carve a miniature? The white visitors were prepared to
pay in silver coins. Some carvers did carve such miniatures for the
purpose. But what can one do with a silver coin in a country, where
Indians have enough salmon to be completely self-sufficient? The
answer is simple – one can use it to make a silver bracelet,
decorate it with Indian design and sell it to some other white
visitor for two silver coins. Contact with white people was
responsible for appearance of a new art genre – silver jewellery
(Indians of that region did not know silver before) as well as
miniature totem poles. Especially the tiny totem poles carved in
argilite – black slate quarried only on Queen Charlotte Islands.
One 19th
century Haida artist, Charles Edenshaw, became so famous carver of
argilite, as well as a silversmith, that today his monographic
exhibitions are organised in famous museums.
Totem poles carved by Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer |
This art thrived until mid-19th
century, when the epidemics of 1860s brought a dramatic halt.
Epidemics worse than the European Black Death or even the Jewish
Holocaust. Carvers who could teach the next generations died out and
storytellers who remembered old legends also died out. The epidemics
facilitated work of missionaries, some of whom thought that totem
poles were pagan idols and wanted to destroy them or at least advised
their converts to ignore them. Moreover, the Canadian authorities
decided that a potlatch was a barbaric custom and banned it. Last but
not least Canada introduced universal education, all Indian children
were sent to school and later they wanted to live like all other
Canadians. They rejected their traditions, nobody wanted totem poles
any more. Even if there were carvers who survived the epidemics,
there was no work for them. In the beginning of the 20th
century the art of totem pole carving all but died out. In the
villages deserted after the epidemics old totem poles slowly
disintegrated and disappeared overgrown by the returning forest.
Half
a century later, in 1950s, some white people from Vancouver decided
to come to the rescue of the rotting heritage. According to the
European approach, works of art should not fall and rot, if they do
so they should be rescued, taken to a museum and conservation should
be undertaken. A society for saving totem poles was created and the
University of British Columbia organised expeditions to distant
islands to find the rotting sculptures and take them to the
anthropology museum in town. They also found a carver who could carve
a brand new totem pole because he did this when he was young. His
name was Mungo Martin and he lived on a Kwakiutl reservation of Fort
Rupert at the northern tip of Vancouver Island. He was asked to carve
a totem pole for a museum in Vancouver He did so and his totem pole
is still standing on the hill behind the museum. It was a precedent,
a little snowball that moved slowly at first but in time it changed
into an avalanche.
In 1957 Mungo Martin worked in Victoria, carving totem poles for a
museum there. He was approached by a young man from Vancouver, who
was interested in Indian art because his mother was a Haida. This
young man was Bill Reid who in time became the main catalyst of the
rebirth of Indian art. He grew up in the city and worked as a radio
presenter but he also had been trained as a silversmith. The
jewellery he produced was very European in style until his first
visit to the Queen Charlotte islands, where his mother came from.
There he saw old silver bracelets made by his mother's uncle, Charles
Edenshaw. These aroused the interest of the young silversmith, who
later became interested in Indian art in general. He found Mungo
Martin and helped him carve totem poles. Later it was Bill Reid
himself who received an order from the Museum of Anthropology in
Vancouver not only to carve a totem pole, but to reconstruct a whole
Haida village, with houses, totem poles and all.
Bill Reid's bronze cast at Vancouver Airport |
Doug Cranmer was a Kwakiutl Indian who also lived in Vancouver at the
time. His father, chief Dan Cranmer of Alert Bay, was famous for
organising potlatches despite the official ban and going to prison as
a result. Bill Reid asked him to help carve the totem poles for the
museum. Doug as a young man had worked as a tree feller so he knew
what to do with huge tree trunks. Bill and Doug worked for several
years and produced two longhouses and several totem poles which still
can be seen on a hill behind the museum On the other hand the
original rotting poles brought from the islands ceased to rot in the
dry museum air and can be seen there as well.
This is how the fame of Bill Reid started, the fame of an Indian
sculptor. The Haida Indians, those who still lived in their islands,
began to be interested in their own tradition. If white people from
the city come to look for totem rotting totem poles, then perhaps
there is something in that tradition. Those white people didn't just
come to pick those totem poles up, first they found the original
owners and paid them, so there must be something in that tradition
that can be measured in money. Unfortunately the tradition among the
Haida had been interrupted and there was nobody like Mungo Martin,
who would remember how to carve totem poles. Young people who wanted
to learn the art of carving travelled to Vancouver to Bill Reid.
Robert Davidson, a grandson of the great Charles Edenshaw, did
exactly that. Today Robert Davidson is the most famous living Indian
carver but when in 1960s he wanted to erect a new totem pole in his
village of Masset, he was viewed askance by the villagers. Unlike
Bill Reid, who grew up in the city, Robert Davidson grew up in the
village of Masset where he lives today. Bill Reid socialised with
white anthropologists and other enthusiasts who were interested in a
tradition exotic to them. Robert Davidson grew up among the people
who rejected this tradition, for him interest in it was an act of
rebellion. For the people of Masset erecting a new totem pole was a
strange thing to do, but this attitude changes when it turned out
that totem poles are a magnet for tourists. Today any booklet about
Haida villages at Queen Charlotte islands is full of totem poles and
in a village of Skidagate (the one where Bill Reid's mother was born)
a museum of old Haida art has been built.
Bill Reid's bronze cast in front of Vancouver Aquarium |
But
it wasn't just the Haida who lost their tradition, other tribes also
turned to Bill Reid, famous by then, for help in rebuilding theirs.
This was the case of Gitksan people who live in the valley of the
Skeena river in the Rocky Mountains. By coincidence the town of
Hazelton by that river has a number of well-preserved old buildings
from the wild west era and is itself a tourist attraction. The
Indians who lived there noted that there is demand for Indian
handicraft but the tradition in that area had died out. Somebody came
with an idea of creating a school of Indian carving. Bill Reid was
asked to teach in this school. He could not accept it because he was
engaged in another project but he recommended Robert Davidson in his
place. Doug Cranmer also taught in this school for some time before
moving to Alert Bay to teach Kwakiutl youth in U'mista craft centre.
In
those schools created in 1960s young Indians could learn again the
forgotten art of carving. Helpful also were books that analysed this
art and classified styles of various tribes. Especially important was
a book published in 1965 by Bill Holm, a curator of a museum in
Seattle. He introduced the term “ovoid”, which is neither a
rectangle nor an oval but something in between. It is a very common
shape in Indian art, mythical figures in painting and bas-relief are
built from such ovoids. Thanks to those books young Indians know in
which style their tribe produced their carvings in the old days. They
could produce authentic Indian sculpture and sell it to tourists.
They could also carve authentic totem poles if there was demand.
This is not simply recycling of old forms; Indian art uses old forms
but is not static. The most creative artists introduce new forms.
Doug Cranmer experimented with an abstract totem pole; he never
finished it but this unfinished pole can be seen in the U'mista
Centre at Alert Bay. Bill Reid used new techniques not known to
Indians before, for example bronze cast. This way he wasn't
restricted by the shape of a tree trunk. His best known bronze
sculpture is “The Spirit of Haida Gwaii”, which stands in the
Vancouver Airport's departures hall. The legendary figures in that
sculpture are the same as in totem poles but they don't have to sit
one on the top of the other. They sit in an Indian boat around a
central figure in a woven Indian hat.
The
totem poles in Stanley Park stand in a charming corner of the park
but they are not visible from afar, somebody who lives in Vancouver
might never go there and so never see them. Totem poles standing in
front of banks may also be overlooked, one can glance at them not
knowing what they are. However, no Canadian can say that he has never
seen the Bill Reid sculpture because it is reproduced on Canada's 20
dollar bills. Thanks to this reproduction the banknote looks good so
it can be said that Bill Reid made good money.
Canadian 20 bucks |
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