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Basketry Hat91.95.53

The Elizabeth Cole Butler Collection.

Culture
Tlingit
Material
spruce root, grass and natural dye
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Basket91.95.38

This basket is a round-walled variety of the Washo fancy basket (it is called degikup). The design on the basket is organized by a meandering band of patterns known as matcati le'lup (arrowhead opposed), referring to the triangles on the corners of the zigzag band. This band isolates large open areas that are filled with free-floating designs: eight-pointed stars, checkerboard diamonds, and notably, a standing figure with a hat and large hands.

Culture
Maidu
Material
willow, redbud, brackenfern root and grass
Made in
California, USA
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
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Basket91.95.25

The Yokuts are some forty to sixty linguistically related tribal groups that historically lived in the San Joaquin valley and adjacent Sierra Nevada foothills of California. They made a variety of coiled basketry forms, including jars with distinct flat shoulders and short, vertical necks. Figurative and representational motifs woven in red and black were common, as were the quail topknots that adorned many Yokuts baskets. The interlocking diamond pattern on the shoulder of this basket is meant to represent a rattlesnake.

Culture
Yokuts
Material
sedge grass, redbud, brackenfern root, grass and quail feather
Made in
“Central California” ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
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Galukw'amł (Mask of the Crooked Beak)89.52.1

Worn during the winter ceremonial dances that accompany a potlatch feast, this mask represents the prestigious inherited privilege of a high-ranking individual. The layers of commercial paint reveal that this mask was repainted at a later date, perhaps to refurbish it when passed to a new owner, a hamat’sa society initiate dancer. Masks such as this one are still carved and worn in dances by Kwakwaka’wakw artists and inheritors of this privilege. Ironically, at the time of its creation, First Nations’ ceremonial practices, including the dancing and display of this headdress, were illegal under Canadian law. The artists working during those arduous years of forced assimilation and oppression are celebrated for carrying on traditions that continue in practice today.

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
red cedar wood, paint, red cedar bark, metal nail, leather and cord
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Basketry Pouch52.148

Gift of Mrs. Fred S. Huntress.

Culture
Chinook
Material
cat-tail grass, beargrass, dyed juncus and twisted juncus backstrap
Made in
“Plateau” ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
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Basketry Mat52.147

Museum Purchase: Caroline Ladd Pratt Fund.

Culture
Clatsop
Material
reed, maidenhair stem and cat-tail grass
Made in
Oregon, USA
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
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Basketry Bag48.3.819

Museum Purchase: Indian Collection Subscription Fund, Rasmussen Collection of Northwest Coast Indian Art.

Culture
Haida
Material
cedar bark
Made in
Klukwan, Alaska, USA
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Cranberry Basket48.3.777

Museum Purchase: Indian Collection Subscription Fund, Rasmussen Collection of Northwest Coast Indian Art.

Culture
Tlingit
Material
cedar bark
Made in
Wrangell, Alaska, USA
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Basket48.3.773

Museum Purchase: Indian Collection Subscription Fund, Rasmussen Collection of Northwest Coast Indian Art.

Culture
Tlingit
Material
spruce root, split grass stem and thread
Made in
Northwest Coast, Canada ? or Northwest Coast, USA ?
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
View Item Record
Basket48.3.769

Museum Purchase: Indian Collection Subscription Fund, Rasmussen Collection of Northwest Coast Indian Art.

Culture
Salish
Material
cherry bark and beargrass
Made in
Fraser River, British Columbia, Canada
Holding Institution
Portland Art Museum
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