Replacing Settler Spaces: The Transformational Power of Indigenous Public Art
Abstract
:1. Placing Public Art
2. Kootéeyaa Deiyí (Totem Pole Trail) Dedication
3. The Totem Pole Route
4. Alaskan Totem Pole Parks
5. Politics and Poles
6. Totem Poles in Vancouver, BC
7. Susan Point
8. Blanketing the City
9. Blanketing the City V: (Rescue) (Aftermath) (Wealth of the Land)
10. Chief Joe Capilano (Sa7plek)
11. Wrapping Up
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Sealaska Heritage Institute is a non-profit organization “founded in 1980 to perpetuate and enhance Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultures of Southeast Alaska.” https://www.sealaskaheritage.org/about-shi-alaska/ (accessed on 15 March 2024) (About 2023). SHI was created in response to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) of 1971, which imposed corporate structures onto Indigenous communities. As the corporate structure did not take into account longstanding cultural practices, elders worked with the Sealaska Regional Corporation to create this non-profit organization, which has become a significant contributor to the resurgence and expansion of Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian cultural practices in Alaska. |
2 | https://www.travelawaits.com/2876721/totem-pole-trail-juneau-alaska/ (accessed on 22 January 2024). |
3 | https://www.mellon.org/grant-story/raising-indigenous-art-and-stories-in-alaskas-capital (accessed on 23 January 2024). Worl estimates Juneau receives one million visitors to the city every year. |
4 | The ceremony also included the dedication of five bronze masks representing the major Indigenous cultural groups of Alaska—Inupiat, Athabascan, Alutiiq, and Yup’ik, as well as Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian. |
5 | The location, name, and description of each pole, including the previously installed Sealaska Cultural Values Pole, can be found at this link: https://www.sealaskaheritage.org/sites/default/files/2023%20Pocket%20Guide_TotemTrail.pdf (accessed on 8 September 2023) (Pocket Guide n.d.). |
6 | For an overview of this history see Charles W. Smythe’s 1989 report (Smythe 1989): The Tribal Status of the Auke Tribe. |
7 | For early publications regarding the tourist experience see, for example, Septima M. Collis’ 1890 (Collis 1890) A Woman’s Trip to Alaska and Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore’s 1885 (Scidmore 1885) Alaska, Its Southern Coast and the Sitkan Archipelago. For analyses of this early literature see Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse’s “Streams of Tourists: Navigating the Tourist Tides in late 19th Century Southeast Alaska” and Robert Campbell’s In Darkest Alaska: Travel and Empire Along the Inside Passage (Campbell 2008). |
8 | As Bunn-Marcuse points out in “Streams of Tourists”: “The 1890 Census report lists 25,048 tickets sold by the Pacific Coast Steamship Company between 1884 and 1890, with the numbers growing from 1600 the first season to over 5000 in the last two years. It was estimated that each tourist spent between fifty and one hundred dollars on curios (United States 1893, pp. 250–51)” (Bunn-Marcuse 2017, p. 171). |
9 | SHI’s approach has many parallels to the nineteenth century context, as indicated by Bunn-Marcuse’s research: “In fact, the Alaskan economy as a whole depended heavily on tourism and especially on the production of Alaska Native curios. The 1890 census reported that Sitka ‘is supported chiefly by the trade of the Sitka and Yakutat Natives, who sell their furs, baskets, carvings, spoons, bracelets, beadwork, etc., and purchase all their clothing and a constantly increasing proportion of food and utensils’ (Boursin 1893a). This was a reliable, profitable trade and one in which the Native vendors, non-Native businesses, and steamship companies depended on each other for success”. (Bunn-Marcuse 2017, p. 172). |
10 | Metlakatla, Alaska, was founded by lay missionary William Duncan and 823 Tsimshian Christian converts who travelled by canoe from Metlakatla, British Columbia, in 1887. Advertised as a utopian Christian community whose members ostensibly gave up Tsimshian ways of knowing, recent scholarship has shown the myriad ways in which community members maintained ancient cultural practices using new technologies (Askren 2009). |
11 | For in-depth background on this history, see, for example, Jean Barman’s Stanley Park’s Secret: The Forgotten Families of Whoi Whoi, Kanaka Ranch, and Brockton Point (Barman 2006), and (Hawker 2003)’s Tales of Ghosts: First Nations Art in British Columbia, 1922–1961, among many others. |
12 | See Marcia Crosby’s essay “Making Indian Art ‘Modern’” for a discussion of Coast Salish leaders protesting the 1966 development of the “Route of Totems” on Vancouver Island (Crosby n.d.). |
13 | This painting is just one example among a myriad of other representations of this pole (Jonaitis and Glass 2010, pp. 104–8). |
14 | Such as Musqueam artists Susan Point and Brent Sparrow Jr., Stz’uminus (Chemainus) artist Luke Marston, Squamish artists Ray Natraoro, Jody Broomfield, and Darren Yelton, among others. |
15 | For a discussion regarding ancient weaving practices as they relate to basketry, see Carolyn Marr’s (2008) essay “Objects of Function and Beauty: Basketry of the Southern Coast Salish.” in S’abadeb, as well as Ed Carriere and Dale Croes’ 2018 book Reawakening Ancient Salish Sea Basketry (Carrier and Croes 2018). |
16 | Susan Point remains the single Indigenous female artist from the Northwest Coast whose artistic practice has received in-depth scholarly and curatorial attention. Recent publications include Arnold and Thom’s Susan Point: Spindle Whorl, the 2017 exhibition catalogue for the Vancouver Art Gallery’s solo exhibition of the same name (Arnold and Thom 2017), and Watt’s 2019 monograph People Among the People: The Public Art of Susan Point (Watt 2019). |
17 | See Bunn-Marcuse and Smetzer’s essay “Working to Change the Tide” for an in-depth discussion regarding the gendered legacies of art along the Northwest Coast (Bunn-Marcuse and Smetzer 2019). See also, Jonaitis’ essay “The Invention and Perpetuation of Culture: The Boasian Legacy and Two 20th Century Totem Pole Carvers” (Jonaitis 2003), which addresses this history specifically in relation to Susan Point and her most well-known predecessor, Kwakwaka’wakw artist, Ellen Neel (1916–1966), who advocated for Indigenous art and artists, and also carved poles of all sizes in a studio located in Stanley Park, with her family. |
18 | https://nctr.ca/records/reports/#trc-reports (accessed on 2 March 2024) (Reports n.d.). |
19 | In her essay “Dancing Chiax, Dancing Sovereignty,” Mique’l Dangeli elaborates on the women’s paddle song called “Skemelh Slulem” and how its enduring connection to the 1886 fire is a potent embodiment of Indigenous sovereignty (Dangeli 2016, p. 82). |
20 | While the iconography of Salish weaving has been employed by Point, Sparrow, and others in countless public artworks, other tangible aspects of Coast Salish ceremonialism are not for public consumption, as they are reserved for sacred spaces within the community. |
21 | This photograph has been incorrectly identified in multiple publications as having been taken prior to Capilano’s journey to England in 1906. It has recently come to light that this was taken just prior to his journey to Ottawa in 1908. As noted in the caption, Chief Capilano is shown wearing the medal he received during his audience with King Edward (Duffek 2023). |
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Smetzer, M.A. Replacing Settler Spaces: The Transformational Power of Indigenous Public Art. Arts 2024, 13, 60. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13020060
Smetzer MA. Replacing Settler Spaces: The Transformational Power of Indigenous Public Art. Arts. 2024; 13(2):60. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13020060
Chicago/Turabian StyleSmetzer, Megan A. 2024. "Replacing Settler Spaces: The Transformational Power of Indigenous Public Art" Arts 13, no. 2: 60. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13020060
APA StyleSmetzer, M. A. (2024). Replacing Settler Spaces: The Transformational Power of Indigenous Public Art. Arts, 13(2), 60. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13020060