I began my research in the summer of 1980 with a month’s fieldwork in the arctic communities of Point Hope and Barrow, Alaska. How well I remember sitting in an empty teachers’ apartment in Point Hope, staring out at the Chukchi Sea, trying to summon the courage to knock on the first door. As is so often the case in rural Alaska, the children took care of that. Before I knew it I was being pulled by an army of small hands down the street to the house of Seymour Tuzroyluk, the Episcopal minister and master ivory carver. That month of fieldwork and several subsequent trips to the Arctic formed the basis of my description of technique and were an invaluable means of gaining information about the history of baleen basketmaking in these and surrounding villages.
Creating a baleen basket taxonomy, which depended upon finding a statistically viable corpus of baskets to measure, proved more difficult. I had assumed that I could obtain such a sample (a minimum of a hundred baskets) by canvassing approximately twenty museums in the United States with extensive arctic collections. Few baskets turned up from these sources, however, probably because of their “non-legitimate” standing. Most baleen baskets at that time were in the hands of private collectors, many of them retired Alaska teachers. Thus, my sample—more than two hundred baskets in all—had to be obtained in twos and threes instead of the tens and twenties I had hoped for.
In the spring of 1981 I made several trips around the United States, visiting old sourdoughs and measuring and photographing their baskets. A more hospitable—and patient—group of collaborators is difficult to imagine. I made many friends, and the memories of those times are with me still. Less entertaining but equally important for patching together the baskets’ histories was week upon week of archival research, mainly in Juneau, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. Even so, many questions still remain to be answered.
Data from the baskets were entered into SPSS (Statistical Package for Social Science), one of the earliest statistical computer programs (and one that some maintain has never been surpassed). The program allowed me to quantify the observable differences among the various styles and types of basket. When these traits had been delineated, I worked with Catherine Mecklenburg, an editor and artist, who cast the descriptions in a scientific context and created the excellent drawings for the text.
In early 1983, after the thesis had been signed and filed, Kesler E. Woodward, then Curator of Exhibitions at the Alaska State Museum in Juneau, applied to the National Endowment of the Arts Folk Art Program for a grant to fund a baleen basket exhibition, publication of the thesis, baleen basket workshops in Barrow and Fairbanks, and a video about the art form. The proposal was funded and, with the participation of the North Slope Borough Commission on History, Language and Culture and the Atlantic Richfield Company, all components were carried out with the exception of the exhibit.
Twenty-one years after I walked into that Seattle shop, the Abe P. Simmonds basket has become an old friend. Today, the little ivory seal suns itself on the desk beside me as I write. In the interim, I have been surprised and pleased by the continued interest in this research. Once or twice a year museum curators, dealers, or collectors send me photographs of baskets to identify, and at least once a month someone asks for a copy of the monograph. I am happy, therefore, that the University of Washington Press has brought it back into print.
Introduction to the 1998 Edition
Rereading the first edition of this monograph fifteen years after its publication in 1983, I am struck by how firmly the study was cast in what Clifford since has called “salvage-paradigm ethnography” (1987). My research, completed in 1982, gloomily predicted that baleen basketmaking was teetering on the brink of extinction (Lee 1983).1 Happily, this has not proven the case. As we approach the new century, the art form is alive and well and shows every indication of remaining so. Publication of a new edition of the monograph is a welcome chance to reflect on some of the changes that have taken place in the interim.
Many of those who participated in this collaborative effort are gone, notably, Patrick Attungana, Elaine Frankson, Eunice Hank, Andrew Oenga, Joshua Sakeagak, and Joe and Nellie Sikvayugak (artists); Thomas Brower, Howard Burkher, Don Burris, and Leslie Melvin (collectors and consultants); Albert Spaulding (thesis committee member); and my parents, William and Margaret Cooper, who generously supported this research and to whom it is dedicated.
Some of the original artists continue to weave, and they have been joined by a new generation, some of them relatives of earlier practitioners: Elijah Attungana, Elmer and Raymond Frankson, Titus Nashookpuk, John Omnik, James Omnik, Sr., and perhaps most prominently, Andrew Tooyak, Sr.
My prediction of a decline in the number of artists may have proved unfounded, but the negative correlation between basket production and availability of wage labor seems to have been borne out. Of the ten to fifteen weavers now at work, the majority are residents of Point Hope, a village that is still fairly removed from dependable sources of wage labor. Conversely, in Barrow, the center of jobs and other economic benefits of the North Slope oil boom, baleen basketmaking now is moribund. Thus, it would seem that baleen basketmaking, like other Alaska native arts, probably will continue to fluctuate according to the availability of wage labor, an easier and more lucrative way to earn a living.
My prediction that quality would decline was also not realized. For several years after the monograph was published, many of the baskets I saw for sale were of depressingly poor quality. Some ten years later, however, the tide began to turn, probably because collectors grew tired of paying steep prices for poor-quality baskets and there were still enough good weavers around to produce the occasional excellent example for comparison. As long as collectors were willing to buy shoddily woven containers and indifferently carved finials, the artists seemed content to cut the corners. When poor ones no longer sold, the artists either began to take pains or went out of business. Today, most baskets I see are beautifully executed. Predictably, however, along with the escalation in quality has come one in price. A good new basket can now sell for a few thousand dollars; a good old one for much more.
A topic that I overlooked in 1983 was the considerable part women played in the history and development of baleen basketry. While it is true that men were associated with baleen in traditional times, and that baleen basketmaking was an art form that originated with men, recent research on the spread of coiled basketry from Siberia to Alaska (Lee 1995) leads me to suspect that many women helped their husbands with the weaving. It is now established that North Alaska Inupiaq women made coiled baskets of willow and spruce root. In the thirties, forties, and fifties, only boys were taught to make the baskets in school, but more recently women often have made the baskets either alone or with partial assistance. Eunice Hank, for instance, first wove for her husband Carl. After his death, other male family members did the rough preparation of the weaving materials, but she finished them, wove the baskets, and even carved their finials. Alec and Elaine Frankson of Point Hope split up the chores much as had the Hanks. In this present generation Mary Jane Tevuk Litchard and Marilyn Hank both prepare and weave the baskets themselves.
Finally, one only need look at the photograph of Kinguktuk (QiNaqtaq), taken in the 1920s (fig. 8), his wife Qusraaq sitting at his side holding a half-finished basket, to realize that when they could, basketmakers returned to the long-established male-female division of labor. I don’t want to overstate the case—many basketmakers’ wives have had their own interests or been too busy—I simply want to acknowledge, however belatedly, those women who have participated in basketmaking through the years.
A final factor that may have contributed to the continuance of baleen basketry is the growing prestige attached to native arts by Alaska native people themselves. Shortly after this research was finished I heard my first report of a baleen basket made for an Inupiaq recipient. When Alec Frankson learned that Eban Hopson2 of Barrow was very ill, he made him a baleen basket with a whale’s tail, a polar bear, and a seal3 on the finial (Frankson 1984; see note26. page 67, this volume). Today, Alaska native arts have taken center stage as symbols of ethnic identity,4 and a growing number