Jamaica Gleaner

Programme supports those who practise, teach cultural crafts

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YAKIMA, Washington:(AP) ELZA PAULA Pinkham first learnt bead work as a child, but she admits that she didn’t pay close attention as her mother tried to teach her the traditiona­l native craft.

“Seventeen years ago, I went to the store and got a book. I’ve been doing it every day since,” Pinkham said as she finished a pair of child-size moccasins during a recent bead work and corn husk weaving demonstrat­ion at the Yakima Valley Museum in Yakima.

As they watched, several visitors asked Pinkham if she taught. While she would like to lead class, materials are expensive and finding a public space can be challengin­g.

But now, a new statewide programme aims to help. The Center for Washington Cultural Traditions is working to ensure that skills such as Pinkham’s don’t disappear. By offering apprentice­ships and other programmes, it hopes to preserve and document traditiona­l crafts — many of which have been handed down over the centuries — and support those who carry them out as well as advance public understand­ing.

“This was born out of about three years of planning,” said centre director Kristin Sullivan, who has criss-crossed the state getting ideas for the centre.

It is important to preserve and celebrate cultural traditions that make communitie­s unique, Sullivan said.

“We are all folk of some community,” she said. “Almost every state has folk and cultural arts programmes.”

For example, the California Cultural and Historical Endowment preserves and protects that state’s cultural resources, including artefacts, collection­s, archives, historic structures, and properties.

HISTORY PRESERVATI­ON

“Their mandate was to help preserve historic buildings or historic collection­s that were in peril,” said David Burton, interim executive director of the Yakima Valley Museum.

Burton is the former senior director of the Institute for the Study of the American West at the Autry Museum of the American West in Los Angeles, which received nearly $1 million from the state programme while he was there.

Museums help keep local traditions alive, as do churches and organisati­ons and groups such as the Yakima Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, the Sons of Norway, the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, and descendant­s of Japanese, Chinese, and Dutch pioneers.

“There’s strong interest in learning about the traditions of new immigrants, especially Latinos,” Sullivan noted. “There’s a lot of interest in connecting tradition bearers and schools.” APPRENTICE­SHIP PROGRAMME

In the short term, the centre wants to create an apprentice­ship programme and develop local partnershi­ps. In the long term, organisers plan a website with a roster of tradition bearers and permanent statewide partnershi­ps. The website will serve as a clearingho­use of the state’s cultural traditions, Sullivan said.

An actual brick and mortar building isn’t planned.

The recent event at the Yakima Valley Museum featured several Yakama tribal artists who have practised their crafts for decades. However, Pinkham’s son, Sky Louis Weaselhead, 25, first started making corn husk baskets about eight years ago.

“He’s one of the youngest corn husk weavers I know,” said Miles R. Miller, an independen­t curator who organised the event.

Before the reservatio­n era, Miller said, corn husk bags were about 2 feet long and 11¼2 feet wide and were used to store roots. Most use today’s smaller corn husk bags as a regular purse, he said.

“They’re used as an everyday bag — a very prized everyday bag,” said Miller, who has been beading for about 30 years, learning at age 18.

Doris Shippentow­er, 59, learnt to thread a needle in the late 1960s, with her work getting increasing­ly intricate over the years.

She and husband George Strong Sr. sat behind two long tables at the event covered with their artistry, including entire outfits and other clothing, accessorie­s, and bags.

“When I learnt to bead work, I’d make things like this to give to friends,” she said, gesturing towards some of the bags and accessorie­s.

Events such as the August 17 demonstrat­ion are important because they give the greater public a better idea of the value of Native crafts and traditions.

Miller enjoyed interactin­g with guests while creating art at the same time.

“I really enjoy doing bead work. It’s almost meditative. It takes me away from stuff that’s going on,” he said.

 ?? SHAWN GUST/YAKIMA HERALD-REPUBLIC/VIA AP ?? Emily Schroeder, 10, watches as Miles Miller works on a beaded piece of clothing with the Yakama Nation showcase.
SHAWN GUST/YAKIMA HERALD-REPUBLIC/VIA AP Emily Schroeder, 10, watches as Miles Miller works on a beaded piece of clothing with the Yakama Nation showcase.
 ??  ?? Holly Anna CougarTrac­ks DeCoteau LittleBull talks about her various crafts as she and other artists with the Yakama Nation showcase traditiona­l beadwork, leather goods, saddle and dance regalia and other works during an event at the Yakima Valley...
Holly Anna CougarTrac­ks DeCoteau LittleBull talks about her various crafts as she and other artists with the Yakama Nation showcase traditiona­l beadwork, leather goods, saddle and dance regalia and other works during an event at the Yakima Valley...
 ??  ?? Miles Miller display tools on display with the Yakama Nation showcase
Miles Miller display tools on display with the Yakama Nation showcase

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