Ethnos

Peoples of the World

Haida

One of the First Nations of Canada, the Haidas live on islands off the west coast of North America. The Haidas were fishermen and artists. The homeland was Haida Gwaii, called the Queen Charlotte Islands. Some people moved north, over what is now the border of Alaska and the United States.

The people made boats, boxes, totem poles, and masks from the wood of the coastal forest: cedar and hemlock and spruce. While most folks made art, the grandest pieces were made by gifted artists who were well compensated for their work. The carving and painting followed sophisticated rules of design. Bill Holm has made a scholarly analysis of formline design.

The people used a ceremony called potlatch to mark important life events and to redistribute wealth. A capable man was much admired for being willing to offer a feast, give away much wealth, and then start again to accumulate wealth. For some decades, the potlatch was opposed by the Anglo-European missionaries and lawmen, but today the people can legally potlatch.

The Haida are known for their intricate weavings, hammered copper pieces, great canoes that travelled hundreds of miles, stories of heroic times.

One of the Haida's sacred symbols is Kiidk'yaas, a sitka spruce tree with a rare mutation causing its needles to be golden in colour. The tree stood on the Yakoun River in Haida Gwaii until it was surreptitiously cut down in 1997, causing great consternation in the Haida community. However, twenty years previous, cuttings had been taken from the tree for the University of British Columbia arboretum, and the University donated one of the resulting trees to the Haida. Parts of the original felled Kiidk'yaas were also replanted. ***

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Myths and Legends of Haida Indians of the Northwest: The Children of the Raven
by Martine Reid Martine Reid

The great stories of the Haida Indians are told by Dr. Reid, wife of a great Indian artist. The complicated tales of Raven, Eagle, Bear Mother, etc., are unfolded; the art is magnificent!

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During My Time: Florence Edenshaw Davidson: A Haida Woman
by Margaret B. Blackman, Margaret B. Blackman,

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Northern Haida Master Carvers
by Robin Kathleen Wright Robin Kathleen Wright

The art of the Haida of the Queen Charlotte Islands and Alaska ranks among the most sophisticated and spectacular art traditions of the world. While Haida art has long been recognized as central to the development of the highly formalized northern Northwest Coast style of design, it has often been viewed as somewhat static and anonymous. Robin K. Wright highlights for the first time the distinctive achievements of several of the most important Northern Haida artists and analyzes the art historical developments and stylistic changes in pole carving.

Northern Haida Master Carvers traces the making of monumental poles from the days of first white contact to the present, illuminating the variations in style that resulted from historical, cultural, and individual circumstances. Wright examines the work of the earliest named Haida pole carver, Sqiltcange, and separates the carvings that can be attributed to the legendary Albert Edward Edenshaw from the large body of work produced by his nephew, Charles Edenshaw. She discusses the legacy of the nineteenth-century artists carried on through the work of their twentieth and twenty-first century descendants and artistic heirs: Jim Hart, current holder of the name Edenshaw; Robert Davidson, Charles Edenshaw's great grandson; and Freda Diesing and Donald Yeomans, descendants of Simeon Stilthda.

In her impeccable and fascinating study, Wright masterfully interweaves the historical and artistic developments of a great sculptural tradition. The book belongs in the library of every Native American art historian, Northwest Coast anthropologist and historian, and indeed every person interested in or engaged in making Northwest Coast art. Its groundbreaking scholarship makes it the definitive work for serious students of this magnificent art.

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Spruce Root Basketry of the Haida and Tlingit
by Ron Reeder Ron Reeder Margaret Davidson

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Heroes & Heroines in Tlingit-Haida Legend
by Mary L. Beck, Mary L. Beck,

Author Mary L. Beck recounts nine traditional Native American legends from the Northwest Coast.

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Chiefs of the Sea and Sky: Haida Heritage Sites of the Queen Charlotte Islands
by George F. MacDonald George F. MacDonald

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Argillite: Art of the Haida
by Leslie Drew, Leslie Drew,

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Haida Texts and Myths: Skidegate Dialect (Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology)
by John Reed Swanton John Reed Swanton

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Being in Being : The Collected Works of a Master Haida Mythteller (Skaay of the Qquuna
by Skaay, Skaay,

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Story As Sharp As a Knife: The Classical Haida Mythtellers and Their World
by Robert Bringhurst Robert Bringhurst

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Nine Visits to the Mythworld: Ghandl of the Qayahl Llaanas
by Ghandl of the Qayahl Llaanas, Ghandl of the Qayahl Llaanas,

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The Haida (Lifeways)
by Raymond Bial Raymond Bial

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***This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Haida"


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