Bentwood Box Item Number: Nb3.1348 a-b from the MOA: University of British Columbia

Description

Undecorated bentwood box with kerfed corners, fourth corner nailed and horizontally pegged. Piece of newspaper stuck to interior wall near rim. The lid (part b), with an adzed surface, is thin and flat with one long edge projecting upwards on angle into large 'lip'. Lid has uneven fit.

History Of Use

Bentwood container, a main storage unit on the Northwest Coast, varied in size, shape, and design depending upon the function each one served. Probably either a cooking box, eluded to by blackened interior surface or an oil storage box, eluded to by black substance and pungent smell. Perhaps lip of lid eludes to seating function.Many boxes and chests had two-dimensional carved and/or painted designs of family crest figures, and by their display, stated family wealth and status. Those undecorated such as this one, or only slightly decorated with grooves, were often for everyday use.

Cultural Context

Utilitarian storage box.

Specific Techniques

Bentwood, or kerfed-corner, containers are constructed by a process unique to the Northwest Coast Aboriginal peoples. The carver begins with a single straight-grained plank of red cedar, or sometimes yellow cedar, spruce, or yew. The surface of the plank is finished with chisels, adzes, and knives; in earlier times, it was smoothed further with sandstone or dried sharkskin. Then three parallel kerfs, or grooves, are carved out at measured points across the width of the board, at right angles to the long edge. The kerfs, which will become three corners of the box, allow the board to be steamed until the wood fibres are softened, and then carefully bent to form a box with symmetrical sides. The final corner, as well as a fitted base, are joined and fastened with pegs (through drilled holes) or laced with spruce root or twisted cedar withes (branches). Storage boxes also have fitted lids of cedar, hollowed from the inside. Finally, painted compositions may be applied to the completed box and shallow carving added to bring the forms into relief. A well-made bentwood box is watertight. Historically, most boxes were used to store preserved foods and material goods; plain cooking boxes could be used to steam or boil food by adding water and heated stones.

Narrative

Wastell said he collected the belongings in this donation in Telegraph Cove in the 1920s.