Contemporary Pottery from North Carolina`s American Indian
Transcription
Contemporary Pottery from North Carolina`s American Indian
Contemporary Pottery from North Carolina’s American Indian Communities Contemporary Pottery from North Carolina’s American Indian Communities Sally Peterson | Photography by Nathan Moehlmann Published for the North Carolina Pottery Center by Goosepen Studio & Press, Conover, North Carolina contents Copyright © 2009 by the North Carolina Pottery Center. Introduction 7 1. Davy Arch 11 2. Bernadine George 15 3. Karen Harley 19 4. Harold Long 23 5. Raleigh & Claudese Lynch 27 isbn 978 -0 -9793 63 1-4-6 6. Senora Lynch 31 9 8 7 6 6 4 3 2 1 7. Betty Maney 35 Photography by Nathan W. Moehlmann, excepting “Betty Maney,” courtesy of Betty Maney, and “Raleigh & Claudese Lynch,” by Dudley Lynch, reproduced with permission. 8. Tara McCoy 39 9. Herman & Loretta Oxendine 43 All rights reserved. Designed, set in Archer, and published for the North Carolina Pottery Center by Nathan W. Moehlmann Goosepen Studio & Press Conover, North Carolina. www.GoosepenPress.com This project was supported by the North Carolina Arts Council, an agency of the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources, and the National Endowment for the Arts. 10. Joel Queen 47 11. Dean Reed 51 12. Amanda Swimmer & Merina Swimmer Myers 55 13. Mary Ann Thompson 59 Exhibition List 63 Introduction T he North Carolina Pottery Center hosted its seminal exhibition, Contemporary Pottery from North Carolina’s American Indian Communities, from May 9 through August 23, 2008. The exhibit showcased works from eleven Cherokee, four Haliwa-Saponi, and two Lumbee artists in clay. Each artist and each tribe has a different story to tell, yet a common purpose unites them. They want no less than to rediscover, recreate, and revitalize the ancient pottery traditions of their peoples. And indeed, they want more than this. Individually and collectively, they wish not only to master an ancient craft but also to elevate its quality to levels that match and perhaps surpass the best pottery found in both ancient and contemporary American Indian traditions. History has left an indelible mark on all Native American Indian cultural expression, including pottery. The commonly accepted trajectory for the decline of indigenous pottery began with brisk trade between first peoples and European settlers and traders. But brutal expulsions of people from their native lands or crushing assimilationist policies towards those who managed to remain decimated populations and traditions alike. Iron pots and tin utensils replaced the wares of most potters, whose traditional village and home life suffered from disruption and relocation. Few potters found reason to pass along their traditions, and few found reason to learn. And yet reminders of this tradition never wholly left those communities that maintained residence on the lands of their forefathers. Some Cherokee families still keep cherished pots, keepsakes of their ancestors. Other families bequeath to their children carved wooden paddles once used to stamp designs onto clay surfaces. Lumbee farmers collect shards turned up by plows, and Haliwa-Saponi children find pieces of pots after a hard rain. Construction projects in the western mountains, ancient Cherokee territory, must pause while archaeologists explore the remains of pottery and other artifacts uncovered by machines digging new foundations. And everywhere, the clay remains. Farmers have known it long; it may lie at an inconvenient depth that stymies plows and strangles roots wherever ancient lakebeds and riverbanks became fertile farmland. Clays of all colors and consistencies line ponds and streams. The North Carolina landscape provides clay in abundance. Children mold clay for fun. Some people still recognize the health benefits of certain clays and ingest them in small amounts. In the late 1800s members of the Eastern Band of Cherokee began to supplement their incomes through selling or trading such wares as baskets and other handmade items to general stores and later to a growing tourist market. Observing the success of the neighboring Catawba Indians of South Carolina with the marketing of small pottery ware to tourists, a number of Cherokee artists refamiliarized themselves with coiling, shaping, and burnishing techniques. Like the Catawba and like their own ancestors, they dug pits in their yards and burned their pottery, learning to manipulate the resulting colors by varying the soft- and hardwoods they burned. A great tradition grew that spanned many generations and brought recognition to such well-known and respected artists as Amanda Swimmer and Louise Bigmeet Maney, both recognized by the North Carolina Heritage Award sponsored by the North Carolina Arts Council. Archaeologists and artists alike have sought information about the antecedents of Cherokee pottery. Continual excavation and perusal of early museum collections have unearthed a body of work with remarkable and consistent features. The ancient Cherokee fashioned thin-walled coiled pots that ranged in size from very small to very large, indeed; it’s estimated some pots stored human remains and may have served as burial urns. Most pottery was decorated with contiguous stamped designs carved into a wooden paddle. Others retained the imprint of corn cobs, shells, and other items 7 that lent themselves to patterning. Some theorize that the patterns strengthened the wall of the pot by varying the surface tension. The older pots showed evidence of high-temperature firing, which enabled them to hold liquids, and were often coated with the oily smoke of burning corncobs, a method that reinforced the waterproofing of the kiln. Archaeologist Brett Riggs, familiar with museum collections of ancient Cherokee pottery, learned of Cherokee artists interested in reclaiming the methodology and aesthetics of early Cherokee pottery. He suggested a collaboration between the North Carolina Arts Council, the Museum of the Cherokee Indian and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s archaeology program to bring together artists and scholars in order to reconstruct the ancient techniques, led by ceramics specialist Tamara Beane. In 2003, fifteen artists (many of whom exhibited in this show) formed the Cherokee Potters Guild, funded in part by the Cherokee Heritage Foundation. Their mission is to teach these techniques to other tribal members while maintaining high quality standards; to create a college course to extend historical and archaeological knowledge; to disseminate information about Cherokee pottery traditions nationally and internationally; and to detect and protect the natural resources vital to continued pottery production. Young artists like Tara McCoy and elders such as Amanda Swimmer have embraced the new styles and techniques and made them their own. Rediscovery of pottery among the Haliwa-Saponi took place largely on an individual level, as multi-talented artists explored numerous arts and crafts common to Eastern woodland peoples. When artist Senora Lynch began to devote herself to pottery, she opened a world of expression that mirrored the shared values of her rural, eastern Piedmont tribe. Having mastered coiled pottery’s challenges of shape, proportion, and consistency, Senora recalled museum pieces of unidentified Southeastern pottery and began to inscribe designs and utilize animal shapes in accordance with these ancient pieces. A vocabulary of place and spirit emerged as longevity turtles, dogwood blooms, the three sisters of corn, squash, and beans, celestial stars, tobacco spirits, 8 introduction and a wealth of other symbols balanced symmetrically on the clay’s tense surface. Senora outlines and colors with a white slip that contrasts with the natural reddish brown of her preferred clay. Senora has been teaching her techniques to willing Haliwa-Saponi students, such as her relatives Claudese and Raleigh Lynch. Fellow artist Karen Harley adds her own variations on the ancient themes she also has observed in museum collections. Senora Lynch has brought her pottery to other Eastern tribes, especially North Carolina’s Lumbee Indians, who are experiencing a renaissance similar to that of the Haliwa-Saponi. It is no accident that North Carolina tribes are in the midst of revitalizing ancient arts. Such artistic activity has emerged across Indian Country as tribes large and small assert their identity and struggle to take their rightful place in the body politic. Although many contemporary artists seek to understand the minds of ancient makers and to reproduce at least parts of this experience, they have achieved much more. Perhaps the greatest surprise to emerge from this earnest effort is the unprecedented creativity that it has unleashed. Artists wishing to study at the feet of these elders have found themselves standing on their shoulders instead, inspired to create works of art that extend beyond the bounds of any previous expression. The catalog to Contemporary Pottery from North Carolina’s American Indian Communities will allow this gathering of North Carolina’s major practicing Indian clay artists to live on in print and image. The North Carolina Pottery Center is indebted to the National Endowment for the Arts for funding the exhibit and catalog. Nathan Moehlmann has provided all photography and catalog design. He has traveled tirelessly across the state to meet and photograph the artists. The North Carolina Arts Council provided technical assistance necessary to produce the catalog. The Arts Council is committed to finding many ways to share our state’s outstanding pottery traditions with the public, both within our borders and beyond. Sally Peterson, Ph.D. Folklife Specialist, North Carolina Arts Council Contemporary Pottery from North Carolina’s American Indian Communities Davy arch | 1 My first memory is of making pottery when I was a child around my grandmother’s washpot. She had a cast iron pot that she would boil the white clothes in out behind the house. And in the branch beside the house there was some clay. And while she was boiling the clothes, we’d be right there around it, and I was always right under it. [laughter] So she showed me how to make little pinch pots. Then we’d fire them around the washpot fire. There was a blue clay that was there in the branch right next to the house. It was really gritty, it wasn’t very fine. That’s the first experience I had making pottery. D avy Arch spent his first ten years living with his grandparents on Stilwell Branch in the Painttown community on the Qualla Boundary. They lived a traditional way of life, and Davy grew up absorbing the practices and lore of an earlier generation. He was drawn to the artistic traditions that permeated his life. “I grew up in an artists’ community here. My uncle Boyce Allison was an artist, Amanda Goingback, all the brilliant artists right here who were resources for everybody, willing to share their techniques and tools and wood, you know, whatever they were working with. I was really fortunate.” Opportunities for Cherokee artists expanded as the tourist trade in the Smoky Mountains increased. Davy studied art through high school, later learning modern ceramic procedures at Western Carolina University. Although woodcarving and mask making were his specialties, Davy continued experimenting with pottery, stone carving, beadwork, and other traditional Cherokee arts. Like many other Cherokee artists, he embraced versatility: Nobody ever told us we couldn’t do it. That’s how I was raised; they said I could do anything I wanted to, so I did. Anything I wanted to. At least I was told to do it the best I could. I think that’s a general philosophy with us. As long as you don’t infringe on someone else, you can do anything you want to. Davy’s ongoing fascination with pottery reached a fever pitch as he helped to plan the pottery revitalization workshops with the Museum of the Cherokee Indian. The archeological evidence of local indigenous pottery with its thin walls, textured patterning, and sometimes immense proportions (burial pots can hold as much as forty gallons) both astounded and inspired Davy and the other Cherokee artists in attendance. An avid local historian himself, Davy enjoyed the ensuing conversations between the scholars and the potters, as they theorized and experimented with reproducing ancient Cherokee coil pots. “We realized they made the pots very thin and textured the outsides so [the pots] can expand and contract in the cook fires, without fear of cracking; thermal shock wouldn’t crack the pottery as bad if it was thin.” The textured effects on the pot’s outer wall are made by stamping the surface with a design carved into the flat end of a paddle: We’ve had ceramics here for three thousand years. Some of the patterns can be identified with regions of the Cherokee territory. Artists in the past were really responsible for developing some of these patterns that related directly to the culture, and had symbolic significance in the religion, like the fire pots we carried fire in. Different pieces were developed Davy Arch, with mother, Jean Arch, inside the Qualla Arts & Crafts Mutual, Cherokee, NC, March 2009. 11 bernadine george | 2 It’s just a good hobby. B Bernadine George in front of her kiln, at home, Cherokee, NC, April 2009. ernadine George may modestly call her twenty-five years of pottery making a hobby, but it is an undertaking that has led her far from home to demonstrate and to teach. It has taken her deep into Cherokee history as she explores the minds of earlier makers by studying their craft. Bernadine began making pinch pots as a young adult, having observed older family members creating pottery for years. “I was just interested,” she explains. Bernadine created pottery when she could take the time from her full-time job and family caretaking. She became expert at the pinch pot styles sold to tourists and appreciated the supplementary income that came from sales. When the workshops about recreating older Cherokee pottery were offered, Bernadine eagerly joined other interested potters to study the old ways. She was immediately impressed by the functionality of the elder pots, noting how function demanded craftsmanship. The high temperatures that rendered pots waterproof required thin walls to survive the heat, thin walls required textured surfaces— such as those created from stamped designs—to make them sturdy by thinning and bonding the clay. Pots had rounded bottoms that fit securely in a bed of coals, and when the coals were banked up around the pot, the thin walls distributed the heat evenly and the sides cooked like the bottom. “These were essential items used in the home,” explains Bernadine. “Most of the Indian cooking was done in pots. That was a way of life.” Bernadine remembers how the fledgling Cherokee Potters Guild members cooked a stew in pots they’d made following the ancient methods. “It was good,” she reports. “You could taste the difference.” Bernadine likes working with a clay out of Macon, Georgia, that has some texture to it. It works well with a paddle, holding up against the Stamped and incised cooking pot. 15 force that comes from stamping on a design. It’s a good clay for the big pots. She makes pots with circumferences of up to fifteen inches. Some of her paddles were carved for her by her brother and her cousin. Other artists also produce paddles. Sometimes she will draw a pattern out, and her brother will carve it for her. Most of the designs, she says, have been carried on from the early days. They can be found on pottery shards or off of older pots in the community or from museum pieces. Bernadine and her brother designed and built a kiln made from cast iron that allows her to avoid pitfalls caused by weather conditions such as humidity, wind, rain, and cold. She can preheat the kiln with just a small fire and then pile on the wood to raise the temperature to over one thousand degrees. She mixes woods to achieve the desired surface colors. “I like to get mine with reddish spots, or different shades—I don’t like mine to come out terra cotta. Poplar burns fairly clean and gives deeper, reddish tones. Pine smoke gives a good, dark color. I use a lot of red dirt, too,” says Bernadine. “You use that for paint, smoothing it into the clay.” This technique is used to create “negative painting”—contrasting colors to create the foreground and background of a design. Bernadine enjoys the special consciousness that comes with the intense concentration pottery requires. But it helps to begin with a relaxed mind. “If there’s a lot of chaos,” she states, “it’s not a good time.” Incised water jar. Stamped bowl. 16 bernadine george Stamped water jar. bernadine george 17 herman & loretta oxendine | 9 That urge—you want to get your hands back to it to build it, to build the clay. That’s the time to do it; I say the spirit is moving then, and it comes together better. If that spirit’s not there, it just don’t come out right. — H. O. A Loretta and Herman Oxendine, in their gallery, at home, Pembroke, NC, April 2009. round forty or fifty years ago, recalls Loretta Oxendine, she and her husband, Herman, were taking a leisurely drive near the river, talking together about their dreams and plans. She remembers Herman telling her that one day he wanted to make pottery like their people did hundreds of years ago. At the time, both Herman and Loretta worked full time and were raising two children. There was little time to explore ways to revitalize the traditional arts of the Lumbee people. Both Herman and Loretta had grown up in Lumbee Indian communities around the Lumber River in Robeson County. They remembered the arrowheads and pottery shards churned up by the plow. Like other Lumbees, they collected the bits of pottery that would rise to the surface after a hard spring rain. Everyone knew the Lumbee came from pottery making people. But only a few tried to learn Gray water pot. the coiling and pit firing techniques that distinguished Indian pottery in the Southeastern United States. In the mid 1990s the children were grown, retirement was fast ap- proaching, and Herman and Loretta began taking classes in traditional Indian arts. At age eight Loretta had learned pine needle basket making from her aunt, and she 43 quickly revived her knowledge and refined her practice. Herman helped with the baskets, experimented with gourd painting and carving, and began to explore pottery with Lumbee artist Carl Anthony Hunt at the Indian Cultural Center. Herman’s brother’s mother-in-law, Nola Campbell, was an established potter from the nearby Catawba tribe. She gave pointers to Herman, and she made some of her last pottery with him before she passed away. Loretta remembers the day Miss Nola showed her the dress she was planning to wear in Washington, DC, where she was scheduled to demonstrate pottery at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival. That day sparked a dream of Loretta’s own that she was able to fulfill in 2007, when she and Herman demonstrated their own Lumbee arts on the Washington mall as part of that year’s Smithsonian Folklife Festival. Many local artists and cultural specialists encouraged Herman and Loretta to continue with their pottery production. As Loretta confides, “Pottery making, that’s work. You form it one day. The next day you scrape it. You dry it out, and the next day you get a little rock or stone and rub it until it shines. You then put in the decoration and then you fire it. That’s a lot of time and a lot of work.” Herman agrees, but explains that when he gets that urge to make pottery, it’s something he cannot resist. He waits for the urge to come to him, though; without that inner compulsion, he just doesn’t trust the result. The heart and the hand must go together. 44 herman & loretta oxendine Wedding vase. Four small bowls. Herman even dreams of going to a spot on the river he’s heard of and digging out the clay. Despite the hard work of digging, drying, cleaning, sifting, and mixing all that dirt, he’s intrigued by the idea of being responsible for every part of the pottery process. Right now he buys his clay from Pam and Vernon Owens of Jugtown, in Seagrove. Pam mixes several kinds of clay, and the Owenses and Oxendines have struck up a friendship centered around discussions of clay, pottery, and the satisfaction of working with one’s hands. Herman mostly coils his pots, although he uses the pinch method for smaller vessels. He favors making coiled vases that he smooths carefully with stones. Nola Campbell’s family helped Herman to make a kiln by cutting an oil drum in half, mounting it lengthwise on a stand, and hinging the two halves together. Herman lined the bottom with fire brick. When it’s time to burn the kiln, Herman lays his pots on the firebrick and covers them with oak firewood. After about twelve hours of steady burning, Herman switches his wood supply from oak to pine; the softer woods cause the fired clay to turn dark and shiny, which he prefers. “Patience, patience, patience,” advises Herman. “You cannot rush it.” Herman and Loretta enjoy bringing their wares to craft fairs, Indian art shows, museums, and powwows. Several customers follow Herman’s work and are eager to collect examples from his expanding repertoire. Loretta, always busy with the ever popular pine needle baskets, has recently sold some of her own pottery and is considering devoting more time to it. Herman, now planning an expansion of the crowded shed that houses his many tools, building supplies, and pottery projects, recalls with delight how Loretta has told him to “Make room in the workshop for me!” Jars. Jars. herman & loretta oxendine 45 joel queen | 10 As a member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, I feel I have a responsibility to keep Cherokee art alive. I live to teach others about my art and the Cherokee culture. Prejudice drives me to educate. It is my passion to break the stereotype that has been placed upon Native art. I strive to link all cultures together through art. My goal is to create art so that people can see their past and future in my creations. A t least nine generations of potters in his family worked the clay before Joel Queen touched its earthy potential. He keeps in touch with these ancestors through the vessels that pass through his hands. His grandmother Ethel Bigmeet taught visiting anthropologists how traditional Cherokee fired their coiled pots in earthen pits. Now he teaches about her in the thesis that earned him a mfa degree from Western Carolina University. Joel thinks about his ancestors always, as he tasks himself with the kinds of artistic challenges they faced. How should he hand prepare the clay so that its consistency is smooth enough not to blast apart in the fierce heat of the kiln, yet rough enough to provide wall strength for a pot large enough to hold the weight of a man? Joel delights in asking such questions, and he answers them with breathtaking creations that challenge status quo “Healing Hands.” understandings of both traditional Cherokee art and of Indian artists. It seems that Joel embodies all the energy ever devoted to art production by his family. He consumed the instruction in all media offered Joel Queen sharing his first pot (left hand) and pot, ca. 1925, by his grandmother Ethel Bigmeet, in his gallery, Whittier, NC, March 2009. 47 dean reed | 11 I consider myself a potter. I have tried the beadwork and made a basket or two. But I love pottery. D ean Reed grew up on the Qualla Boundary. Her father was a logger, and her mother worked in the costume shop at Oconoluftee Indian village. Dean loved the special occasions when she was allowed to accompany her mother to work in the village. She would watch the artists at work and hope to someday be one of them. She got her wish when she turned fifteen: I come to work here as a teenager. I’ve been making pottery for thirtyfive years now. And when I was about fifteen years old I come to work here at the Indian village, and I was a guide to begin with and I would sit with the women at pottery on Sundays. I was interested in it, and at the time, Lydia Littlejohn and Annie Driver, they would help me. I would start out with small bowls, then I got to bigger bowls, then I got to making wedding vases. It was all fun and I really enjoyed doing it. They did tell Dean Reed, in front of the Museum of the Cherokee Indian, Cherokee, NC, July 2009. Stamped water jar. 51 amanda swimmer & | 12 merina swimmer myers I always think about my old ancestors, and I ought to just keep going and keep making pottery and teaching others to make pottery. — A. S. A Amanda Swimmer, at home, Cherokee, NC, April 2009. manda Swimmer has lived all of her eighty-eight years at the end of the road atop Big Cove, in the Strait Fork section. Surrounded by the homes of several of her nine children, Mrs. Swimmer continues to garden, to clean, and to cook for working parties in her community. And when she feels like it, she sits down to make coils or to pinch out a pot she will eventually burn in the open-air pit dug into her yard. She has been making pottery this way for sixty some years. Few living potters were available to teach her how to make pottery. There was no history of continual practice in her family. People knew about pottery, though. Some families kept treasured pots handed down through the generations. Most children played with clay, and the elders could describe the coil method. People remembered pots burning in open-pit kilns right in the yard. Some families still owned Wedding vase and small vase, Amanda Swimmer. hardwood paddles carved with designs. And the tourist market was growing as automobile travel penetrated into the Smoky Mountains. Virtually all pottery made since the late 1880s was sold to tourists, and Cherokee potters followed the stylistic and marketing lead of the 55 Catawba Indians, a regional tribe with long experience in adapting traditional pottery to a tourist clientele. So Amanda Swimmer taught herself what she needed to know. She hunted clay in the streambeds outside her door. Her husband Luke helped her experiment with pit fires. Her expertise grew. She expanded her pottery repertoire, often stamping on designs with wooden and bone paddles, or sea shells, or smooth rocks. Amanda Swimmer began demonstrating the art of pottery making at the Oconoluftee Village in 1956. Working closely with other potters exposed her to traditional skills practiced by other Cherokee potters; she was especially indebted to the expertise of Mabel Bigmeet. Amanda coiled, smoothed, and paddled pots for over forty years at Oconoluftee Village. Building more than one thousand pots during the summer months honed her skills and elevated her artistry to the master class. Amanda Swimmer’s expertise in working with clay has won her national recognition and many awards. Her pottery has received numerous prizes and is on display in museums in Raleigh, in Washington, DC, and as far away as New Mexico. She received the North Carolina Heritage Award in 1994. Amanda joined younger generation potters in their fascination with the archaeological models made available to them from university and museum collections. She traveled with her younger students to discuss the implications of renewing Vase, Amanda Swimmer. Swan, Merina Swimmer Myers. 56 amanda swimmer & merina swimmer myers Cherokee pottery based on examining ancient pots, analyzing the ware to determine its original functions and techniques, and the subsequent experimentation with clay, form, and technique to forge a new, robust expression of the pottery tradition. To acknowledge her contributions to the Appalachian region, unc–Asheville presented her with an honorary doctor of humane letters degree. For Merina Swimmer Myers, Amanda Swimmer’s daughter, the cycles of pottery making were a part of everyday life. She knew how to identify clay beds peeping out from a stream bank, and she knew how to buy different clays from other regions of the Southeast. She learned from her parents how to sort the woods for the pit fire in the yard, and she could read the signs to tell if the weather seemed conducive to firing. Pinching and coiling clay were early play activities, and her skill and expertise grew as she herself did. Merina travels the distance from her home in Murphy back to the Qualla Boundary frequently to help her mother. She also comes to deliver her own fine pottery ware to the Qualla Arts & Crafts Mutual, the Cherokee Indian cooperative that sells the juried members’ art works. There, she is considered a master potter in her own right. For years, whenever Amanda Swimmer received an invitation to demonstrate her award-winning pottery methods or to teach a pottery workshop, Merina was there by her side. Both mother and daughter are pleased that the next generation of the Swimmer family is now learning pottery, too. Pot, Merina Swimmer Myers. amanda swimmer & merina swimmer myers 57 exhibition list 1. Davy Arch, incised “Gumby.” 4. Bernadine George, incised fish. 8. Bernadine George, incised water jar. 5. Bernadine George, contemporary vessel. 9. Bernadine George, stamped water jar. 6. Bernadine George, stamped and 10. Karen Harley, “Longevity Frog.” 2. Davy Arch, incised mask. incised cooking pot. 3. Bernadine George, stamped pot with square pattern. 11. Karen Harley, “Carolina Parrot.” 7. Bernadine George, stamped bowl. 63