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Shadow and substance : a computer assisted study of Niska and Gitksan totem polesShane, Audrey Mackay January 1978 (has links)
This thesis attempts to distinguish varying styles in a particular set of massive carvings from the Northwest Coast of North America, the totem poles of the Niska and Gitksan. The method of investigation is based on the use of hierarchical clustering and multi-dimensional scaling computer programmes. These programmes are of a type used in ecological, geological, and archaeological studies. Their purpose is to establish a numerical taxonomy from which inferences may be drawn. The data used in the study are based exclusively on photographs, and it is possible to include artifacts no longer in existence. There is an ethnographic record against which the success of the methodology is measured.
It is concluded that there are four distinctive styles of carving and organizing the totem poles. Two of these are attributed to the Niska and two to the Gitksan. A rhythm of order is demonstrated in the placement of figures on the poles. It is concluded that the taxonomy gives positive support to the hypotheses of previous investigators in regard to clan formation: originally there was a two-fold rather than a four-fold division among these Tsimshian groups. Traits associated with
individual artists are not defined by the programmes, although associated traits preferred in certain locations are described. / Arts, Faculty of / Anthropology, Department of / Graduate
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How Canada stole the idea of Native art : the Group of Seven and images of the Indian in the 1920’sDawn, Leslie Allan 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the conflicted relationships between the construction of a national culture
and identity located in landscape painting and the continuing presence of Native art and identity
in Canada in the 1920s. It contends that the first was predicated on the assumed disappearance of
the second. The first of five case studies examines and questions the validation of the Group of
Seven at the imperial centre: the British Empire Exhibitions held at Wembley in 1924 and 1925,
from which Native presence was excluded. The critical responses, collected and republished in
Canada, are analyzed to show the unspoken influences of British landscape traditions, the means
by which Group paintings were used to re-territorialize the nation, and to destabilize the myth of
an essential Canadian national consciousness. The first confrontation between Canadian native
and Native art occurred when a small group of Northwest Coast carvings was included within a
related exhibition in Paris in 1927. The French critical responses validated the Native pieces but
withheld recognition of the Group's works as national and modern. The reviews were collected
but suppressed. The third study examines the work of the American artist Langdon Kihn. He
was employed by the Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Railways to work with the
folklorist/ethnologist Marius Barbeau in producing images of the Stoney in Alberta and Gitksan
in British Columbia. His ambiguous works supported claims to Native presence and cultural
continuity, which ran contrary to repressive government policies, but were critically disciplined
to ensure a message of discontinuity. The fourth investigates a program to restore the poles of
the Gitksan, while changing their meaning to one signifying cultural decrepitude. Gitksan
resistance testified to their agency, cultural continuity and identity. The fifth examines a program
fostered by Barbeau to turn the Gitksan and their poles into the subjects of Canadian painting as
"background" for the emerging nation's identity. This confrontation, which included Jackson,
Carr and others, foregrounded all the problems. The exhibition which resulted in 1927
unsuccessfully attempted to join Canadian native and Native art and effect closure on the
"narration of the nation".
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How Canada stole the idea of Native art : the Group of Seven and images of the Indian in the 1920’sDawn, Leslie Allan 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the conflicted relationships between the construction of a national culture
and identity located in landscape painting and the continuing presence of Native art and identity
in Canada in the 1920s. It contends that the first was predicated on the assumed disappearance of
the second. The first of five case studies examines and questions the validation of the Group of
Seven at the imperial centre: the British Empire Exhibitions held at Wembley in 1924 and 1925,
from which Native presence was excluded. The critical responses, collected and republished in
Canada, are analyzed to show the unspoken influences of British landscape traditions, the means
by which Group paintings were used to re-territorialize the nation, and to destabilize the myth of
an essential Canadian national consciousness. The first confrontation between Canadian native
and Native art occurred when a small group of Northwest Coast carvings was included within a
related exhibition in Paris in 1927. The French critical responses validated the Native pieces but
withheld recognition of the Group's works as national and modern. The reviews were collected
but suppressed. The third study examines the work of the American artist Langdon Kihn. He
was employed by the Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Railways to work with the
folklorist/ethnologist Marius Barbeau in producing images of the Stoney in Alberta and Gitksan
in British Columbia. His ambiguous works supported claims to Native presence and cultural
continuity, which ran contrary to repressive government policies, but were critically disciplined
to ensure a message of discontinuity. The fourth investigates a program to restore the poles of
the Gitksan, while changing their meaning to one signifying cultural decrepitude. Gitksan
resistance testified to their agency, cultural continuity and identity. The fifth examines a program
fostered by Barbeau to turn the Gitksan and their poles into the subjects of Canadian painting as
"background" for the emerging nation's identity. This confrontation, which included Jackson,
Carr and others, foregrounded all the problems. The exhibition which resulted in 1927
unsuccessfully attempted to join Canadian native and Native art and effect closure on the
"narration of the nation". / Arts, Faculty of / Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of / Graduate
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Making meaning in totemland: investigating a Vancouver commissionPhillips, Kimberly Jean 11 1900 (has links)
In the years immediately following World War II in Vancouver, native Northwest
Coast images and objects were frequently made visible in the public spaces of the city,
claimed and exchanged physically and symbolically in events involving both aboriginal
and non-native participants. Like the political and social relations surrounding them, the
meaning and purpose of these objects and images was, arguably, pliable and constantly
shifting. The Totemland Pole, commissioned in 1950 by Vancouver's fledgling
Totemland Society, and designed by local Kwakwaka'wakw carver Ellen Neel, was one
such object-as-symbol. Numerous individuals and communities, aboriginal as well as
non-native, were implicated in the object's production. Following anthropologist
Anthony Cohen's work on social symbols in The Symbolic Construction of Community, I
argue that while the symbol itself was held in common, its meaning varied with its
participants' unique orientations to it. The differently motivated parties, specifically the
work's creator, Ellen Neel, and its commissioners, the Totemland Society, attributed
divergent meaning to the Totemland Pole simultaneously. As Cohen suggests, I propose
that this difference did not lead to argument. Rather it was the form of the Totemland
Pole itself, its impreciseness or "malleability," within the particular socio-political
climate of its production, which enabled these divergent meanings to co-exist.
In order to investigate ways in which the Totemland Pole was understood
simultaneously as symbolically meaningful, this project attempts to map out the subject
positions of and relations of power between Ellen Neel and the members of the
Totemland Society, in relation to the particulars of the local historical moment. The
forgotten details of the Totemland Commission and the lack of a legitimizing discourse
of Neel's production, both fuelled by the gendered, class and race inflected politics of
knowledge construction, have necessitated that the concept of absence be fundamental to
my project. I have therefore approached the Totemland Commission from a number of
surrounding institutional and social discourses, which form trajectories I see as
intersecting at the site of the Totemland Pole. Any one of these trajectories may have
been taken as the singular approach for the investigation of such an object. However, I
wish to deny the autonomy normally granted these discursive fields, emphasizing instead
the ways they are interdependent and may operate in tandem to enrich our understanding
of an object which was the result of, and relevant to, shared histories.
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Making meaning in totemland: investigating a Vancouver commissionPhillips, Kimberly Jean 11 1900 (has links)
In the years immediately following World War II in Vancouver, native Northwest
Coast images and objects were frequently made visible in the public spaces of the city,
claimed and exchanged physically and symbolically in events involving both aboriginal
and non-native participants. Like the political and social relations surrounding them, the
meaning and purpose of these objects and images was, arguably, pliable and constantly
shifting. The Totemland Pole, commissioned in 1950 by Vancouver's fledgling
Totemland Society, and designed by local Kwakwaka'wakw carver Ellen Neel, was one
such object-as-symbol. Numerous individuals and communities, aboriginal as well as
non-native, were implicated in the object's production. Following anthropologist
Anthony Cohen's work on social symbols in The Symbolic Construction of Community, I
argue that while the symbol itself was held in common, its meaning varied with its
participants' unique orientations to it. The differently motivated parties, specifically the
work's creator, Ellen Neel, and its commissioners, the Totemland Society, attributed
divergent meaning to the Totemland Pole simultaneously. As Cohen suggests, I propose
that this difference did not lead to argument. Rather it was the form of the Totemland
Pole itself, its impreciseness or "malleability," within the particular socio-political
climate of its production, which enabled these divergent meanings to co-exist.
In order to investigate ways in which the Totemland Pole was understood
simultaneously as symbolically meaningful, this project attempts to map out the subject
positions of and relations of power between Ellen Neel and the members of the
Totemland Society, in relation to the particulars of the local historical moment. The
forgotten details of the Totemland Commission and the lack of a legitimizing discourse
of Neel's production, both fuelled by the gendered, class and race inflected politics of
knowledge construction, have necessitated that the concept of absence be fundamental to
my project. I have therefore approached the Totemland Commission from a number of
surrounding institutional and social discourses, which form trajectories I see as
intersecting at the site of the Totemland Pole. Any one of these trajectories may have
been taken as the singular approach for the investigation of such an object. However, I
wish to deny the autonomy normally granted these discursive fields, emphasizing instead
the ways they are interdependent and may operate in tandem to enrich our understanding
of an object which was the result of, and relevant to, shared histories. / Arts, Faculty of / Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of / Graduate
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Accumulated labours : First Nations art in British Columbia, 1922-1961Hawker, Ronald W. 11 1900 (has links)
In this dissertation, I chart the conflicting and shifting
assertions of meaning for Northwest Coast objects in Canada
through a series of representational projects implemented between
1922 and 1961, beginning in January 1922, with the prosecution by
the Department of Indian Affairs of participants in the Cranmer
potlatch. The intersection between the concept of the 'fatal
impact' or death of First Nations societies under European
modernization, federal assimilationist policies, the government's
exercise of disciplinary control, and the expansion of public
museum collections was explicitly illustrated when the Lekwiltok,
Mamalillikulla, and the Nimpkish peoples surrendered over
seventeen cases of ceremonial objects in exchange for suspended
sentences for violating the potlatch ban.
The dissertation concludes by examining the Gitanyow
agreement, engineered between 1958 and 1961, in which Gitanyow
laws, histories and territories would be published by the
government of British Columbia in exchange for the removal and
replication of four crest poles. The raising of the poles'
replicas in 1961 coincided with Canadian parliament's approval of
the enfranchisement of First Nations people, the theoretical end
to the era of assimilation in Canada.
These events bookend a period in which representation
continued to be entwined with politica and social conditions
created by the Indian Act that depended on promulgating views
that First Nations lifeways were vanishing. However, production
of Northwest Coast objects retained significance throughout this
period, such objects playing complex and multifaceted roles. Because of the symbolic and financial value many Euro-Canadians
attached to First Nations objects, "art" proved an avenue for
communicating First Nations-related social, political and
economic issues.
The objects produced or displayed between 1922 and 1961
operated through the projects I describe in the intertwined
transformative processes of identity construction and boundary
marking among individual First Nations groups and within Canadian
national identity. Through these projects, important steps were
taken in formulating two major characteristics of the post-1960
period: 1. a burgeoning market in Northwest Coast objects
constructed as "traditional;" and 2. First Nations activism for
land claims and self-determination using "tradition" and "art" as
a platform in activism for land claims and self-determination.
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Accumulated labours : First Nations art in British Columbia, 1922-1961Hawker, Ronald W. 11 1900 (has links)
In this dissertation, I chart the conflicting and shifting
assertions of meaning for Northwest Coast objects in Canada
through a series of representational projects implemented between
1922 and 1961, beginning in January 1922, with the prosecution by
the Department of Indian Affairs of participants in the Cranmer
potlatch. The intersection between the concept of the 'fatal
impact' or death of First Nations societies under European
modernization, federal assimilationist policies, the government's
exercise of disciplinary control, and the expansion of public
museum collections was explicitly illustrated when the Lekwiltok,
Mamalillikulla, and the Nimpkish peoples surrendered over
seventeen cases of ceremonial objects in exchange for suspended
sentences for violating the potlatch ban.
The dissertation concludes by examining the Gitanyow
agreement, engineered between 1958 and 1961, in which Gitanyow
laws, histories and territories would be published by the
government of British Columbia in exchange for the removal and
replication of four crest poles. The raising of the poles'
replicas in 1961 coincided with Canadian parliament's approval of
the enfranchisement of First Nations people, the theoretical end
to the era of assimilation in Canada.
These events bookend a period in which representation
continued to be entwined with politica and social conditions
created by the Indian Act that depended on promulgating views
that First Nations lifeways were vanishing. However, production
of Northwest Coast objects retained significance throughout this
period, such objects playing complex and multifaceted roles. Because of the symbolic and financial value many Euro-Canadians
attached to First Nations objects, "art" proved an avenue for
communicating First Nations-related social, political and
economic issues.
The objects produced or displayed between 1922 and 1961
operated through the projects I describe in the intertwined
transformative processes of identity construction and boundary
marking among individual First Nations groups and within Canadian
national identity. Through these projects, important steps were
taken in formulating two major characteristics of the post-1960
period: 1. a burgeoning market in Northwest Coast objects
constructed as "traditional;" and 2. First Nations activism for
land claims and self-determination using "tradition" and "art" as
a platform in activism for land claims and self-determination. / Arts, Faculty of / Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of / Graduate
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