 |
Early European visitors to the Maritime region wrote with
great interest about the things Mi'kmaq and Maliseets made
and the techniques they used.
The Indians acquired and manufactured the necessities
of life without metal tools, gunpowder, cloth, glass or milled
lumber.
Instead, they made use of stone and clay and
virtually every part of plants and animals: roots, bark and
wood; skin, bone, ivory, antler, shell, hair, fur, feathers,
quills and sinew.
The only metal available for use was naturally
occurring copper, which was too soft for blades but could be
worked into such items as fish-hooks or pounded thin and rolled
up to make rings and beads.
The arrangement of beads in some burials indicates
that they were embroidered on the edges of hoods or collars
or strung on necklaces and bracelets.
Early European visitors, who saw people at work
or heard about the "old ways" of making things, reported Maliseet
and Mi'kmaq crafts as they were practised around the time of
contact. Their writings and drawings describe the manufacture
of jewellery and the decoration of clothing, wigwam-walls and
household containers.
|
Denys, Lescarbot and LeClercq mentioned animal
shapes and lace-like patterns as the designs used by the Indians
at the time of contact.
Europeans, of course, brought their own styles of embroidery,
decorated pottery and jewellery with them.
The work of each
group had an influence on the other's, and it was not long
before the Maliseets and Mi'kmaqs incorporated the motifs
in their work.
Especially popular were geometric designs, drawn with mathematical
instruments, and floral pattens consisting of interconnecting
flowers, leaves, buds and tendrils. From these patterns and
aboriginal designs developed the double-curve motif, which
is the most popular form used today. |
 |
Europeans also brought with them a new technology, and different
materials for tools, weapons, clothing and decoration. The Mi'kmaqs
and Maliseets quickly adopted those materials and skills that they
recognized as improvements.
Ready-made iron implements, including blades
and firearms, were clearly superior to stone blades and points
in performance, durability and convenience. Iron and copper kettles
were easier to use than cooking vessels made from birchbark or
hollowed out in fallen logs. These "modern conveniences" allowed
people more time for other pursuits, including craftwork.
Some of these pursuits became a source of income as the fur trade
caused game populations to decline and European settlement limited
access to the fisheries.
Glass beads and silk ribbons encouraged innovations in design and
decoration. As soon as they began to obtain them, the Maliseets and
Mi'kmaqs used these materials to decorate materials to decorate clothing,
which itself was changing in style as ready-made cloth replaced skins
and furs. Scissors and metal needles made possible other new forms
of decoration, such as moose hair embroidery and ribbon applique.
 |
The Mi'kmaq and Maliseets did not adopt all European
materials and artifacts. Although their way of life changed dramatically
during the 1500s, they continued to require clothing and equipment
appropriate for travelling, hunting, fishing and trapping.
During the contact period, and up to the present day, a number of the decorative
techniques of the Indians became popular with European collectors and other
customers. Etched birchbark and embroidery using dyed porcupine quills,
wampum and moose-hair were especially sought after. |
Artists added glass beads, silk ribbons and European
dyes; and they applied them to European items such as boxes, purses,
tea-cosies, picture frames, sewing baskets and furniture.
Many non-Indians living in Canada adopted Indian designs
for their own decorative work and learned to do the quillwork and moose-hair
embroidery.
Mi'kmaq and Maliseet craftspeople also manufactured
things they themselves had never used before. Farming equipment,
in particular, was in high demand.
 |
Well into the 1900s, they were producing butter
tubs, barrels, scale baskets, and potato baskets.
But the idea of making things for sale or barter,
rather than only for their own use, may not have been a new one.
In fact, the Europeans stumbled into a thriving trade network,
the Mi'kmaqs and Maliseets having taken trade items to the interior
of the continent long before the newcomers themselves were seen
there. |
Today, the utilitarian needs of Natives and non-Natives are met
almost entirely by machine made products.
Yet Maliseet and Mi'kmaq craftspeople continue to provide
equipment, such as canoe paddles, baskets and snowshoes, for everyday
tasks. They practise the decorative arts of their ancestors, too. Some
of these have been handed down in an unbroken chain of teaching from
pre-contact times; others, like porcupine quillwork, have been revived
in recent years. These techniques are another way- like the oral
tradition, spirituality and adaptations to the environment- in which
peoples express and define their identity.
|