Thursday, February 16, 2017

Weaving - Cedar hats

Sharing this beautiful video. Herb Rice is one narrators and I appreciated hearing his wise words as well as the many other words of wisdom that was shared.

This video made me very emotional. I saw a video about 10 years ago and tried to gather the Cedar and weave but it didn't work for me and I understand why now. I was grieving and not in a good space and I needed guidance. So much wisdom has been lost. I was at UBC MOA yesterday doing some research and read and saw many photos and drawing that demonstrated how important Cedar is.

Published on Dec 9, 2012

"From the moment of birth, to the time of passing, cedar has traditionally played a vital role in the life of the First People of the Pacific Northwest.

This 30min documentary tells the story of cedar, how the bark is stripped from the cedar tree and prepared for cedar weaving (hats) and discusses the art of cedar weaving and the affect this workshop had on the participants. Project was facilitated by Maria Sampson.

The video was produced by Louise McMurray and the Cowichan Aboriginal Film Festival and directed, shot and edited by Phil Ives."

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

No More Stolen Sisters! #MMIW Feb 14 March















































Women and Children are Sacred

Red Dress Song- Raising Awareness about Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women 

https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.ca/2016/03/red-dress-song-raising-awareness-about.html

 


Thursday, February 9, 2017

Feb 2017- #Carving4Reconciliation Progress

Well what do you do when it snows...and you can't make it to class because there are buses stuck everywhere. You work at home.

We have had lots of snow and mucky weather lately so I have been very busy.

These are my results so far. I am going to make a video of the process but just thought I would get this posted. Tired from all the work but feeling energetic and accomplished because the sun is out!

Sorry, I should do a better job with the photos...it's hard to match and in person they look much different as the reflections are totally different depending on the lighting and in the photos I am trying to show the reflections..but then they look a bit tacky...so it's a tough call. Wait for the videos..then you will see. I will try to get them done tonight!

Starting with  first 3 carvings I did last semester https://mylangaratrccarvingjourney.blogspot.ca/2016/12/carving-tool-accomplishments-1st.html  you can see my latest carving at the bottom.

Title: The Cocoon and the Moon
Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
 Title: The Moon and the Butterfly
Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
 These two carving are supposed to look aged...I destressed them but it's difficult to see in these photos. I will post more photos later.


Title: The Moon and Cocoon
Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
 Title: Women and Children are Sacred
Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
Here is a video I made of my carvings.



Title: Women and Children are Sacred
Artist: Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

#Carving4Reconciliation

#Women #Children #Moontime #Sisters #Grandmothers #Family #Life #MMIW
#Moon #Earth #Love #Sisterhood #WeAreOne #WaterIsLife #Langara #Carving
#Indigenous #Sacred #LifeIsSacred

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

MMIW Commission Press Conference

The commissioners tasked with overseeing the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls will hold their first press conference Tuesday, more than six months after they were first appointed.

Monday, February 6, 2017

Mexicans Border Crossing- The Entire Journey

Did you see the entire original commercial.
My child's father is Mexican, we are not together, I returned to Canada when I got pregnant and while the idea of him immigrating here was considered there was a high cost, many many issues and in the end he just did not want to live here

We have returned 3 times, for 5 months each time but have not been for 4 years now. I love my Mexican families as we have many that have reached out and adopted us, helping us with shelter, food, support and love. I miss them all very very much and I worry about them and I am outraged by Trump and his followers.

I worry about my child and what her future will be like. I am grateful we live in Canada but so sad and disturbed by the way things are going as racism thrives here too while people like to think we are so inclusive just look at Canada's ugly history of Residential Schools and the current situation of high percentages of Indigenous people incarcerated

 Here is the link to this statistic
http://www.oci-bec.gc.ca/cnt/rpt/oth-aut/oth-aut20121022info-eng.aspx

Watching this video and understanding how deeply we are affected by the threat of the wall and all that it entails.

So grateful we do not have to make a journey like this but in realityy this is everyone's journey.
We must break down on a the walls of injustice, hate and racism.



If you are not familiar with what a journey like this entails then you should learn. This women and child arrive, most do not and there are courageous caring souls that actually go out and retrieve the bodies so they can some how give closure to the families. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Migrant_deaths_along_the_Mexico%E2%80%93United_States_border



Mr. Trump should visit here. 
TRIGGER WARNING- GRAPHIC IMAGES & DESCRIPTIONS
In 2011, the Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner (OME) recovered 184 dead migrants from southern Arizona's Sonoran Desert. Dead in the Desert takes you inside the Pima County OME, as medical investigators attempt to identify and repatriate the bodies of two migrants recovered from the desert on June 26, 2011.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Special Guest - Xwalacktun

So last Friday's class was really exciting because we had guests. Remember I told you  I was waiting to get permission to use some photos and info.
https://mylangaratrccarvingjourney.blogspot.ca/2017/01/guests-wisdom-design-and-carving.html

http://www.xwalacktun.ca


Our Special Guest was:
 Xwalacktun
http://www.xwalacktun.ca/

Have a look at some of the AMAZING work that he creates. http://www.xwalacktun.ca/wood/

We were in for a very special treat! It was great. He was so honest and open and he had us laughing so hard we cried  and inside I was crying about some of the things he said. He had it very hard in public school but it obviously is being expressed through his art now.

Here is some info from his bio

"Xwalacktun was born and raised in Squamish. He carries with him the rich ancestries of his father’s (Squamish Nation) and mother’s (Kwakwakw'wakw Nation) of the Coast Salish clans. His father, Pekultn, carried a hereditary chieftainship from Seymour Creek in North Vancouver. He would like to acknowledge Capilano College and Emily Carr College of Art for teaching him the skills to have a start in his career. His endurance and commitment through trial and error helped propel him forward as an artist."

"Healing, growth and raising an awareness of the environment are central themes in Xwalacktun’s work. By focusing on how the traditional stories relate to his own life, he suggests to us how to use this ancient knowledge to help heal ourselves and our community. The giving out of positive energy and seeing it come back through the young people is the reward that continues to feed his spirit so that he can give back to others"

Here's his bio. http://www.xwalacktun.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/xwalcktunLongBio.pdf

Here's a few photos from class.

http://www.xwalacktun.ca

http://www.xwalacktun.ca


Xwalacktun was rushing off to Germany for BAU 2017 the World's Leading Tradeshow in Architecture, Materials and System .  He was delivering some very special  doors that were going to be displayed. I was grateful that he stopped in to visit and talk with us about our project.
 http://bau-muenchen.com/index-2.html

Contact:
http://www.xwalacktun.ca/contact/ 

This is a really great interview. 
Below are a bunch more. Have a listen! 




Xwa-lack-tun (Rick Harry), Opening Doors Project, 2015 from Emily Carr University on Vimeo.



Water Is Life!! Thanks! You have the best day too!!!
I love watching him carve in this video and the story of the bear was very touching. Thank you for sharing Xwalacktun.





I really love this video where he's carving at the end. It's very calming and relaxing.






Xwa-lack-tun - Traditional Welcome to Coast Salish Territories from Emily Carr University on Vimeo.














Images for Xwalactun - Google Images




Related Links:
http://www3.gordonsmithgallery.ca/Gallery/ArtistPatrons/Xwalacktun/Pages/default.aspx
http://www3.gordonsmithgallery.ca/Gallery/Collection/FrontDoors/Pages/default.aspx
http://www.lattimergallery.com/collections/xwalacktun
https://www.bchydro.com/news/conservation/2015/master-carver.html
http://www.sfu.museum/time/en/panoramas/beach/xwa-lack-tun-rick-harry/
https://shop.slcc.ca/learn/xwa-lack-tun-rick-harry/
https://harmonyarts.ca/xwalacktun-prints-sale 

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Design Ideas - Abundance-Sustainable- Eco-System-Balance





So last week we were all gathered together and we were discussing the design we are going to create and carve.

We were all taking turns voicing our ideas.

I had some ideas and so I was anxious to share.

It was my turn. I had tried to listen patiently and not just think of what I was going to say when my turn came...but then you know what happened...

When it was my turn a million ideas and thoughts started jamming the airwaves in my mind...and were all forcing there way to the front...I could feel myself searching my mind as I tried to find the exact words to try to describe what I was seeing in my mind.

It was useless. I stopped. I felt annoyed with myself, discouraged.

Then I came home and I have been on a mission ever since to express what was in my mind that day.

First, I drew what was in my heart, got a piece of  wood  and then I carved it https://mylangaratrccarvingjourney.blogspot.ca/2017/01/how-i-spent-my-sunday-carving.html

Then the drawings came fast and furious, I was just looking at things, photos, pictures and drawing. It was like it wasn't me...it was the ancestors. My Gr.Gr grandma Theresa Enos and my Great Grandma Mary Ann Poirier, they were drawing.

Drawing has never been so easy and I was enjoying it so much I just didn't want to stop. It was late at night and everyone was asleep and they were bugging me to quit, turn off the lights and go to sleep to.

 As soon as I woke I went right to work and finished putting the ink on them and then started to paint.

"Paint faster"  voices in my head said. I think it's my grandmothers', they want me to hurry and tell the story....show people the way....

They are guiding me that's for sure and I am doing my best to listen.

"Paint faster" I hear and I tell them "I am going as fast as I can!!" and giggle, tired but happy, content.

It's all good.

Anyways, I photographed each stage and then I put them in Photo Shop and edited them, then put them in Movie Maker and made a little video with music.

I hope you like it. It's just some ideas that I have for a carving we are doing.

My idea just focuses on what Justin has been talking about, "Abundance" and I have been hearing it other places. Indigenous peoples had true sustainable environments. We need to go back and learn how to reap the bounties with out destroying and over harvesting. We must learn to live in harmony. People need to  recognize and give great credit because Indigenous peoples, both men and women, but especially the women were hardworking, strong, that maintained there eco-system through resourcefulness, hunting and gathering and by passing the knowledge and wisdom on to their children. Something that was destroyed by the hate in the Residential Schools and the greed and  ignorant effort to assimilate everyone to colonialism.

So my Great Great Grandmother on my mother's side was (Songhees)- Theresa Elisa Enos - unfortunately I have not yet been able to trace her maiden name- her Indigenous name. My Great Grandmother also on my mother's was Mary Ann Poirier and her Grandmother was Marie Ann Maranda dit Le Frise (Iroquois & Kalapuya ) https://mylangaratrccarvingjourney.blogspot.ca/2016/11/enos-poirier-ancestry-kalapuya-iroquois.html

Now she was an AMAZING woman..
Early documents in our possession read “… I was married there to Joseph Brulé, a French Canadian and went to Cowlitz and later to Victoria, British Columbia. Lived there till he died and had six children by him … only two are living now, Ellen and Cecile. Two years after my husband died, I married Jean Baptist Vautrin, a Canadian … by Mr Vautrin I had nine children … "
http://www.sookenewsmirror.com/community/303481881.html

 
There was abundance!!
"The Salish cornucopia includes a great abundance of roots, greens, berries, nuts, apples, seeds, flowers, honey and tree sap, tree bark, fresh plant sprouts, spruce tips, deer, elk, bear, pheasant, ducks, geese, freshwater eel, bullheads, trout, bass, and sea foods including seaweed, crab, seal, whale, sea urchins, mussels and clams, salmon, cod, halibut, and the small fish they call the oolichan. Together these foods and medicines provided a healthy balance of nutrients. "
https://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/salish-feast-ancient-roots-and-modern-applications

But please read about how they maintained the eco-system and their families and birthrate. See link below.

"As a semi-nomadic people, the Kalapuya(s) lived in permanent winter homes and migrated throughout the Willamette Valley during the warmer months. They traded regularly with their Molalla and Cayuse neighbors as well as other Northern California, Oregon coast, and Columbia River tribes." (Kalapuya, page 4)

Food -The Kalapuyas were hunters and gatherers. Women did most of the gathering, while men were the hunters. Salmon, trout, and eels were part of their diet as were birds, small game, deer, bear, and elk. Grasshoppers and a type of caterpillar were considered delicacies. Other food items included hazel nuts, berries, tarweed seeds, and wapato. (Zenk, page 547-548)

Camas root was the Kalapuyas' most abundant and important staple. This "bulbous root plant resembles an onion in shape and consistency but is considerably more bland in taste," according to "Cooking up Camas," an article in Historic Marion. A member of the lily family, "camassia quamash" still grows in the Willamette Valley; it is known for its beautiful blue spring time blooms.

Kalapuya women dug the camas with forked wooden sticks and then roasted and dried the root in pit-ovens. This mixture was also pressed into cakes or loaves for later use as food or as a valuable trade item. http://www.salemhistory.net/people/native_americans.htm



Hey are you on Instagram. I post stuff there, why don't you come check it out.
https://www.instagram.com/zipolita 
This is a sample of the things I post there. 



Here's a few photos but please watch the video above.

Moontime- Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Camas Root-- Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Herring Eggs- Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Ooligan Oil---Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Cedar - Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Cedar--Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Berries & Baskets- Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Baby -in Cradleboard- Papoose
 Here's someone whose making cradleboards because it is an endangered tradition
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/limon/cradleboards-to-preserve-our-past-and-protect-our

#Women
#Child
#Indigenous
#Culture
#Motherhood
#Sisters
#Sisterhood
#Life
#Lifecycle
#Love
#Light
#Knowledge
#Wisdom
#Generations
#7generations
#Moontime
#Grandmothers
#Aunts
#Unity
#One


Related Links:
Enos & Poirier Ancestry- Kalapuya, Iroquois, Portuguese, Songhees, Metis https://mylangaratrccarvingjourney.blogspot.ca/2016/11/enos-poirier-ancestry-kalapuya-iroquois.html
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.ca/2016/03/my-portuguese-and-songhees-heritage.html
https://mylangaratrccarvingjourney.blogspot.ca/2016/09/my-heritage-and-7-generations.html

http://portuguesepioneersofbc.blogspot.ca/search/label/joe%20silvey
http://portuguesepioneersofbc.blogspot.ca/search/label/john%20enos 

Sunday, January 15, 2017

How I spent my Sunday Carving...

Yep, this is it. I carved all day. It was lovely but I am tired and my hands are sore. 

I want to work on the mountains more, I was working on rounding my moon but I definitely want to define the mountains and maybe put a little snow on it.

Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

Photos/Art © 2016 Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
Wow, the lighting really messes with my eyes on these. How about you?

Guests, Wisdom, Design and Carving

We had SPECIAL GUESTS yesterday in class (I will share more about this in another post.).
That was really fun. 

Wow, we cover so much in the day and a lot of it is subtle, so I just try to absorb as much as I can.
Someone asked me what stood out for me yesterday so here's a little list, no random or importance

-We attached a frame to the panels- actually I arrived a little late, so I watched and took photos! ha! ha! still I tried to remember for if I have to one day.

-We talked about the rings in the boards in the panels. We talked about how old they actually be..possibly 500 more or less

- Talked about old growth wood and what it is and how it grows, how in the forest the young trees race to the top of the canopy but then they are spindly and then the thicken over many years and the lower branches drop. How people thought the could reproduce forest but they can't...the new lumber just isn't the quality

-Talked about grain, which way does it go, how to feel for it, ... how cutting a board is so different than splitting cedar...and how cedar was just shipped to Europe almost as junk. So so sooooooooooo sad.

-Talked about what kinds of sand paper I should use on my knives and about the stone I bought.

-Talked about cedar, where to buy it and things like that.

Shane shared special things with us.

Our special guests shared powerful moving stories about their lives that touched my heart and motivated me, inspired me,  saddened me, made me laugh. Made me laugh so hard my cheeks hurt. 

Yes, it was a great day.. and emotional day. I never get through a day in this class without a lot of energy and emotion...

Emotion, that's what stood out, there was great emotion when we were close to deciding on how to design the panel. We are getting so much closer all the time. It's getting really exciting.

Anyways, here's what I did today. We decided that we are going to have one large circular image in the centre, split between two panels and then 9 circles each side.

That is the plan so far and so, what we are doing is designing and carving a piece of our own and it will be attached. When we finish our pieces we can help on the big panels. So this is just for fun, all I actually have for an assignment is to create a new design, so here is an idea and them for fun and practice my attempt at carving it.

So today I went and bought a piece of yellow cedar and here is my attempt and my new design.

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017


Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017

Photography by Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita © 2017