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Western Subarctic
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Floral designs on articles made by the Indians of the northern
forests were once thought to be traditional native motifs. Yet,
such patterns are seldom seen on items made before 1800, and were
never present in prehistoric native art expressions. The designs on
this mid-nineteenth-century Métis pouch clearly represent European
flowers in compositions that are reminiscent of colonial folk art.
This influence is not surprising when we consider that Ursuline
nuns in Québec in the mid-1600s had started mission schools in
which they instructed native girls in the art of embroidery.
Truly floral art, however, had its genesis in the Great Lakes
region in the late eighteenth century. There, Métis women living at
missions and fur trade posts integrated realistic floral designs
into their pictorial vocabulary. By the time the Métis had settled
on the Red River, their floral artistry was so distinctive that
they came to be called the Flower Beadwork People by the Indians of
the region. Pictured here is a Métis octopus pouch - so called for
the four double tabs at the bottom. Made of cloth, such pouches
were embroidered with silk thread or beads, and were used for
carrying pipe, tobacco, and flint-and-steel. Gradually, through
trade and intermarriage with the Métis, native peoples began to
borrow their brilliant floral motifs, and the style spread
throughout northwestern Canada, leading to the development of
several local variants. [Treasures]
(Western Woods Cree)
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