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ACCI flows from the knowledge that Cree culture must be captured, maintained, shared, celebrated, and practiced. Cree Elders have spoken of the need for a central place for the protection of the way, and have developed a vision for Aanischaaukamikw over several decades.

Showing posts with label Margaret Orr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Margaret Orr. Show all posts

Aug 4, 2020

Reflections on Painted Caribou Hide Workshops

by Margaret Orr

In the months of January, February, and March 2020, I embarked on a journey to Ouje-Bougoumou, Mistissini, Eastmain, Chisasibi, and Whapmagoostui in Eeyou Istchee (Quebec). My journey was to facilitate workshops that focused on the designs painted on caribou hide coats and other items of clothing and other belongings. Aanischaaukamikw Cree Cultural Institute (ACCI) in Ouje-Bougoumou offered me the position to do the workshops based on my contemporary art practice, extensive cultural knowledge from my experiences living on the land, and because I had led research workshops for the same project in summer 2019. I accepted the position and it was an honour to be able to contribute to the reawakening of this art form related to my ancestors.

I was busy working on my degree show ’10,000 Drowned’ for my Master’s Degree in Fine Arts at the University of Regina at the end of 2019. I didn’t have much time to plan out my workshop before travelling to Ouje Bougoumou in January 2020. I quickly jotted down ideas on how I would deliver the workshops. I had already began preparing in August 2019 by exploring painting with ink on small pieces of caribou skin, canvas and paper. I liked the way it looked and began to get excited to teach the process to people at home in Eeyou Istchee.

Painting on caribou hide using pigments made from minerals found in nature was done for ceremonial purposes and also to beautify an object. When the  Europeans came to trade and introduced glass beads and embroidery thread, painting on caribou skin began to fade away, and many of the designs migrated to floral designs. Whereas before, the designs were very geometric, with a lot of straight and curvy lines. From what I can see, it seems the designs were inspired by the landscape, animals, plants, migration, and the sky in our region. The work of my ancestors was both highly detailed or very minimal. It seems it depended on the artists and the materials available to create with, which would obviously vary from season to season and year to year as we traveled through our territory. From the stories I read and heard, clothing, ceremonial hides and other items were painted so the animals can see them and being pleased with what they saw, would come towards the hunters to offer themselves to sustain us. This is how it was, every care was taken to be respectful to the animals, and with the painted caribou-skin coats. Even though we have no historic examples today I am sure that moose hide was also painted, with extra special care taken to honour them, as they are a big animal and can feed many people.

When I was facilitating the workshops, I had some resources with pictures and texts to use for discussion and for people to look through. The main book they looked at that has a lot of pictures of designs made by our ancestors are found in the book, “To Please the Caribou: Painted Caribou-Skin Coats worn by the Naskapi, Montagnais, and Cree Hunters of the Quebec-Labrador Peninsula,” by Dorothy Burnham, who was a Conservator at the Royal Ontario Museum in the late 20th century. For us, we found the photographs useful, but the text itself had a great deal of conjecture or opinions that are presented as fact, when there are many things that we will never know, or that we as Eeyou people have a completely different understanding of because of the depth of understanding our own culture, when compared to assumptions made by outsiders. On that note, we have a project report that is forthcoming in an upcoming edition of KULA: Knowledge Creation, Dissemination and Preservation Studies.

In my workshops and artistic practice inspired by the painted caribou belongings, I focused on where the inspirations for the designs come from and the reasons for them. I also talked about what I discovered from what I could understand based upon my own experiences living in Eeyou Istchee. I had watched my mother, grandmother and other women in Fort George[1] / Chisasibi, the community where I grew up, sew designs on clothing like mittens and moccasins. I noticed there was a lot of similarities between their design elements and the ancient designs of our ancestors. I was also drawing and painting similar designs when I was experimenting with art materials. I know that the natural environment of the Chisasibi territory where I grew up also influenced my work. I also think that the ability to create traditional designs comes from blood memory, from our DNA, our genetic makeup. We all inherit certain traits of our ancestors through our DNA. One of those traits is artistic creativity.

For the workshops we used ink and acrylic paint, paint brushes, calligraphy pens and goose feather quills. The surfaces used to paint on were paper, canvas, and leather. ACCI supplied two small caribou hides that had been fixed white, and the art supplies. This link takes you to the catalogue record for a painted hide created at the workshops in Summer 2019 – 2020.07.01 by Margaret and other Eeyou artists. The whole project has been funded by the Canada Council for the Arts, in their ‘Creating,Knowing and Sharing : The Arts and Cultures of First Nations, Inuit and Métis Peoples’ funding stream. The printed resources I got from the ACCI library. The photographs featured in this blog are of finished works made by participants, except for Whapmagoostui where students didn’t have time to finish what they started but they did continue on after I left.

Workshops

Ouje-Bougoumou was the first community to hold a workshop. It took place in the Skills Workshop at Aanischaaukamikw (ACCI). During the workshops, participants explored working with the paint pigments and painting and drawing tools, gaining confidence in their creativity and enjoying the environment they were working in. The outcome of the workshop produced some nice work.

This is a small purse made by Trifona Simard. She decided to paint on canvas, as she wanted to explore her talent before committing to painting on caribou-skin. Before she painted on the canvas, she practiced painting designs on paper until she gained confidence in handling the paint and the tools.

This is a small purse made by Trifona Simard. She decided to paint on canvas, as she wanted to explore her talent before committing to painting on caribou-skin. Before she painted on the canvas, she practiced painting designs on paper until she gained confidence in handling the paint and the tools. 



Minnie Coonishish made this laptop cover for herself. She used ink on some hide that she supplied herself and sewed it together by sewing machine. She started it at ACCI and finished it in Mistissini where she is living.



Mistissini was the next stop on my journey. With the assistance of Jane Voyageur, the cultural coordinator, I set up the workshop in the Neoskweskau Sports Complex. There happened to be a general assembly going on at the same time, so I had quite a few visitors watching the participants as they worked. There were different age groups who participated, including two children.

This little bag was made for a little girl’s walking out ceremony. Her mother, Bethany Blacksmith, painted on moose hide and caribou skin.



Jane Voyageur, who likes to hunt and fish, made herself this gun case. She painted on canvas using ink and the top is covered with caribou hide and a strip of bias tape.



Beth Sealhunter Longchap made this bag for her husband when he goes hunting. She did not change the way her piece of leather was cut from the caribou hide and craftily used its form to create the bag after painting on the leather with ink. We can see the floral and geometric designs she made. 



Eastmain was my third stop. We had the workshop in the Cultural Centre beside the school. Some people made designs while some people visited. One young girl came after school to paint on paper.  On the last day of the workshop, we had a feast of moose, fish, and ptarmigan.

This three foot long banner was painted on canvas by three sisters: Florrie Mayappo, Ena Weapenicappo, and Kathleen Whiskeychan. I helped a bit. We made it to hang on their tent door. The design is an old one found in the book, “To Please the Caribou.” It was nice to sit around the table and paint together.


Chisasibi is the place I come from and it was nice to be back there. We had the workshop in the Parish Hall. Some midwives who were training and working in Chisasibi also participated. Two children also came and very quickly picked up the concept of the designs and painted some on paper. Two men came to make something, one a small banner and the other painted on his hunting coat.

This small bag was made by one of the older midwives, and I unfortunately don’t remember her name. She used ink to paint on caribou hide. She said this was here first time working with leather. She did practice painting on paper first.


After the workshop in the Parish Hall was done, I went to the Cultural Camp to look for people who were not able to come to the workshop. I was in luck, I found two people, Janie and Charlie Pepabano, who were waiting for their stretched raw caribou hide to freeze so they could scrape it. I showed them designs from the written texts and the projects I was working on. They tried painting on paper and small pieces of caribou hide until it was time for them to scrape the frozen caribou hide. 

Janie and Charlie Pepabano were at the Cultural Camp and were very interested in trying out the inks. They tried painting on paper and caribou hide. They found the hide absorbed the ink very well. It would have been nice to spend more time with them as they shared some knowledge and stories about caribou and the past while we were sitting around the table – this is when stories and our traditional knowledge typically get passed on, in the kitchen, or while doing activities on the land. 

Whapmagoostui, the only fly in community in Eeyou Istchee, is one place I hadn’t been to since 1977. I was surprised how much the place grew in size and population. The workshop was at Badabin Eeyou School  with the secondary level students in the Cree Culture/Language classroom. The teacher of the classroom was Louisa George, who had also attended the research workshops in Summer 2019. She had some pictures of traditional Cree subject matter that I used to show the students how the ancient designs could be related to things in the pictures. While working, the students often asked Louisa for the correct way to say words in Cree that related to what they were learning about the caribou, the land, the language, etc. I found out that the students are able to write whole essays in Cree.  Every time they came in the classroom, they were eager and started to work right away. But, because of the schedule of secondary school, students did not have the time to finish their projects in one week but they planned to complete them after I left.





Most Badabin Eeyou School students chose to first draw their designs on paper and then transfer them onto canvas. Some students expressed their choice to make their designs on canvas until they feel confident enough to be able to make them on caribou hide. They liked to use their names in their designs.

We had planned to do one final workshop at the hotel in Montreal where Cree patients and their families stay when they are there for health care than cannot be provided in the region. Unfortunately this was around the same time as the pandemic lock down starting in mid March, so we have had to postpone this workshop. It was at this point that I returned to Ouje Bougoumou, where I sheltered during the lockdown. During that time, I explored the area around Ouje and found minerals and other organic materials for my pigment experiments I wrote about in my previous blog, Making Paint Pigments.

My Samples

When I teach art, I like to show participants sample of my work so they have a general idea of what a work in progress and finished work looks like. This is to help them generate their own ideas.

Below are samples of things I made for the painted caribou hide workshops.


These are two different painted canvas gun cases. I used ink to paint with and both sides of the gun cases have the same design. One is sewn together with a sewing machine and the other is sewn by hand. One of these is now in the collections of Aanischaaukamikw – 2020.06.01

This is a completed painted caribou-skin bag. I used ink to paint with. I gifted this to the Whapmagoostui cultural coordinator, Joe Einish, who participated in the summer 2019 research workshops and now works as the Cultural Coordinator. Joe is Naskapi and his mother made painted caribou coats in the past, one of which they think was purchased by a museum but we have not been able to locate it yet. 



This is a work in progress sample of a painted canvas bag that has yet to be sewn together. I used ink to paint with.

After the workshops were completed, I made these children’s mittens out of moose hide, and used ink to paint with. The white trim and fringes are caribou hide. These mittens are now in the collections of Aanischaaukamikw – 2020.06.02 ab



For more about Margaret’s art, please see this article in Nation magazine.

[1] Fort George was relocated in the 1980s to the current location of Chisasibi because of fears of flooding from a hydro electric dam.

 



Jun 19, 2020

Making Paint Pigments


By Margaret Orr



It’s been a real pleasure working on the Painted Caribou-Skin Coats Project with the Aanischaaukamikw Cree Cultural Institute in Ouje-Bougoumou, Quebec.

Margaret looking at painted coats with our research group at the Royal Ontario Museum.


After a trip to see ancient painted caribou-skin items in the Royal Ontario Museum in August, 2019, I wondered what it would be like to make my own paint from ingredients I gather from the natural environment in Eeyou Istchee. As soon as the snow started to melt this spring of 2020, I began to gather some of the ingredients. In this article, I share the process I went through during the beginning of my experimenting with making my own paint pigments.



Dye from Black Spruce Tree Cones

The Black Spruce tree cones of Eeyou Istchee make a brilliant brown dye. The cones grow in clusters and are found at the top of the tree. It was early April when I picked the cones, while they have a dark purple green and brown hue, before opening to drop their seeds. When I was a young woman, my mother pointed at them in the late fall and said, ‘A long time ago they used to boil them to make a dye to color their fishnets’. In the fall the cones are more purple.



This picture is an example of what the spruce cone dye looks like on plain paper. I made small marks on small pieces of caribou skin to experiment and the leather received the dye/ink very well. I did not try to mix balsam fir sap/resin with the dye. I did mix some dye with egg yolk and it went onto the paper very well. This is the first experimenting I did. 

Balsam Fir Tree Sap/Resin

Balsam fir sap, also known as resin, doesn’t freeze in the bark during the winter. Therefore it is easy to harvest all year, but it is most plentiful during the spring. The sap should be clear light yellow. If it is white yellow, do not use it as it could be a sign that the tree is fighting a sickness. When the sap is collected, keep a cover on it and it should stay runny for quite a while. One species of coniferous tree has bark similar to balsam, but the needles are different. 





After poking a hole in the blister, I put my container (not included in this picture) right against the bark and under the blister to catch the sap. When collecting sap, it is important to remember not to use all the blisters on the tree, as sap is good for the tree. Always thank the tree for the sap you are harvesting.




Paints Using Balsam Fir and Oil



This ochre is the color of sienna. I found the ochre at a rock quarry near Ouje-Bougoumou in  April. Using a spoon, I scraped the ochre and it turned into a fine powder. There are no sand particles in this ochre. When liquid was added to the ochre, it turned into a darker sienna.



This is a 1 3⁄4 inch in diameter piece of white tanned caribou skin. In this piece I used ground ochre for a pigment and mixed it into balsam tree sap and canola oil to make my paint. At the edge of the skin I used the black spruce cone dye I made earlier to paint a border. I found that the oil mixed with the sap carried the pigment right into the skin. The sap helped to make the pigment stick to the skin. I am sure this paint is water resistant  but I have not tested this yet.




These are the ingredients I used to make the painting on watercolor paper below. I left out the canola oil because there is oil in the egg yolk. I used a chicken egg for this because I do not have access to fish eggs for now. Water mixes well with egg yolk, but not so well with grease. The water is good to thin the color, but I didn’t need to use a lot of water as the balsam fir and the egg yolk are liquid enough. The darker I want the brown, the less egg yolk I use. 



The brown lines are painted using ochre, sap and oil. I find this mixture soaks right into the watercolor paper and the pigment adheres very well to the paper due to the sap. These brown lines I painted on before I discovered I might not have to use oil when I use egg yolks.
The lighter brown has egg yolk mixed with sap and a little bit of water. I added the water to help the paint go into the paper. The light yellow in the triangles is egg yolk and water, with very little sap and no ochre. The thin yellow lines are just egg yolk and water, with no ochre.




After receiving a gift of a whole goose during the 2020 hunting season, I kept the gall bladder to use as green paint. When I was a teenager I noticed that goose gall stained clothing a dark green and made a mental note that it would be a good paint. Now, here is my first example of using goose gall for green. I also found some raw umber while walking around Ouje-Bougoumou. It was easy to grind so I brought it home and mixed it with sap and goose grease. It worked very well as a pigment. I didn’t try it with egg yet. Over the summer hopefully I will have some fresh fish eggs to work with, instead of the store-bought chicken egg. I look forward to when I will experiment with all pigments on caribou skin. 


These are the tools and ingredients that I used to make my paints.

I feel very excited by this experiment. I will occasionally continue experimenting with other pigments that are available throughout the year with the goal to make a small painted caribou-skin item – watch this space for updates on my progress.