fbpx
Wikipedia

Basket weaving

Basket weaving (also basketry or basket making) is the process of weaving or sewing pliable materials into three-dimensional artifacts, such as baskets, mats, mesh bags or even furniture. Craftspeople and artists specialized in making baskets may be known as basket makers and basket weavers. Basket weaving is also a rural craft.

Artist Lucy Telles and large basket, in Yosemite National Park, 1933
A woman weaves a basket in Cameroon
Woven bamboo basket for sale in K. R. Market, Bangalore, India

Basketry is made from a variety of fibrous or pliable materials—anything that will bend and form a shape. Examples include pine, straw, willow, oak, wisteria, forsythia, vines, stems, animal hair, hide, grasses, thread, and fine wooden splints. There are many applications for basketry, from simple mats to hot air balloon gondolas.

Many Indigenous peoples are renowned for their basket-weaving techniques.

History

While basket weaving is one of the widest spread crafts in the history of any human civilization, it is hard to say just how old the craft is, because natural materials like wood, grass, and animal remains decay naturally and constantly. So without proper preservation, much of the history of basket making has been lost and is simply speculated upon.[citation needed]

Middle East

The earliest reliable evidence for basket weaving technology in the Middle East comes from the Pre-Pottery Neolithic phases of Tell Sabi Abyad II[1] and Çatalhöyük.[2] Although no actual basketry remains were recovered, impressions on floor surfaces and on fragments of bitumen suggest that basketry objects were used for storage and architectural purposes. The extremely well-preserved Early Neolithic ritual cave site of Nahal Hemar yielded thousands of intact perishable artefacts, including basketry containers, fabrics, and various types of cordage.[3] Additional Neolithic basketry impressions have been uncovered at Tell es-Sultan (Jericho),[4] Netiv HaGdud,[3] Beidha,[5] Shir,[6] Tell Sabi Abyad III,[7] Domuztepe,[8] Umm Dabaghiyah,[9] Tell Maghzaliyah,[8] Tepe Sarab,[10] Jarmo,[11] and Ali Kosh.[12]

The oldest known baskets were discovered in Faiyum in upper Egypt[13] and have been carbon dated to between 10,000 and 12,000 years old, earlier than any established dates for archaeological evidence of pottery vessels, which were too heavy and fragile to suit far-ranging hunter-gatherers.[14] The oldest and largest complete basket, discovered in the Negev in the Middle East, dates to 10,500 years old.[15] However, baskets seldom survive, as they are made from perishable materials. The most common evidence of a knowledge of basketry is an imprint of the weave on fragments of clay pots, formed by packing clay on the walls of the basket and firing.

 
Woven baskets made of rush and palm fronds

Industrial Revolution

During the Industrial Revolution, baskets were used in factories and for packing and deliveries. Wicker furniture became fashionable in Victorian society.[citation needed]

World Wars

During the World Wars some pannier baskets were used for dropping supplies of ammunition and food to the troops.[16]

Types

Basketry may be classified into four types:[13]

  • Coiled basketry, using grasses, rushes and pine needles
  • Plaiting basketry, using materials that are wide and braid-like: palms, yucca or New Zealand flax
  • Twining basketry, using materials from roots and tree bark. This is a weaving technique where two or more flexible weaving elements ("weavers") cross each other as they weave through the stiffer radial spokes.
  • Wicker and Splint basketry, using materials like reed, cane, willow, oak, and ash

Materials used in basketry

 
Bending vines for basket construction in Pohnpei

Weaving with rattan core (also known as reed) is one of the more popular techniques being practiced, because it is easily available.[13] It is pliable, and when woven correctly, it is very sturdy. Also, while traditional materials like oak, hickory, and willow might be hard to come by, reed is plentiful and can be cut into any size or shape that might be needed for a pattern. This includes flat reed, which is used for most square baskets; oval reed, which is used for many round baskets; and round reed, which is used to twine; another advantage is that reed can also be dyed easily to look like oak or hickory.[citation needed]

Many types of plants can be used to create baskets: dog rose, honeysuckle, blackberry briars once the thorns have been scraped off and many other creepers. Willow was used for its flexibility and the ease with which it could be grown and harvested. Willow baskets were commonly referred to as wickerwork in England.[17]

Water hyacinth is used as a base material in some areas where the plant has become a serious pest. For example, a group in Ibadan led by Achenyo Idachaba have been creating handicrafts in Nigeria.[18]

Vine

Because vines have always been readily accessible and plentiful for weavers, they have been a common choice for basketry purposes. The runners are preferable to the vine stems because they tend to be straighter. Pliable materials like kudzu vine to more rigid, woody vines like bittersweet, grapevine, honeysuckle, wisteria and smokevine are good basket weaving materials. Although many vines are not uniform in shape and size, they can be manipulated and prepared in a way that makes them easily used in traditional and contemporary basketry. Most vines can be split and dried to store until use. Once vines are ready to be used, they can be soaked or boiled to increase pliability.[citation needed]

Wicker

The type of baskets that reed is used for are most often referred to as "wicker" baskets, though another popular type of weaving known as "twining" is also a technique used in most wicker baskets.[citation needed]

Popular styles of wicker baskets are vast, but some of the more notable styles in the United States are Nantucket Baskets and Williamsburg Baskets. Nantucket Baskets are large and bulky,[citation needed] while Williamsburg Baskets can be any size, so long as the two sides of the basket bow out slightly and get larger as it is weaved up.[citation needed]

Process

The parts of a basket are the base, the side walls, and the rim. A basket may also have a lid, handle, or embellishments.

Most baskets begin with a base. The base can either be woven with reed or wooden. A wooden base can come in many shapes to make a wide variety of shapes of baskets. The "static" pieces of the work are laid down first. In a round basket, they are referred to as "spokes"; in other shapes, they are called "stakes" or "staves". Then the "weavers" are used to fill in the sides of a basket.

A wide variety of patterns can be made by changing the size, colour, or placement of a certain style of weave. To achieve a multi-coloured effect, aboriginal artists first dye the twine and then weave the twines together in complex patterns.

Basketry around the world

Asia

South Asia

 
Punjabi Basketmakers, c. 1905

Basketry exists throughout the Indian subcontinent. Since palms are found in the south, basket weaving with this material has a long tradition in Tamil Nadu and surrounding states.[citation needed]

East Asia

 
Basket making in Hainan, China. The material is bamboo strips.

Chinese bamboo weaving, Taiwanese bamboo weaving, Japanese bamboo weaving and Korean bamboo weaving go back centuries. Bamboo is the prime material for making all sorts of baskets, since it is the main material that is available and suitable for basketry. Other materials that may be used are ratan and hemp palm.[citation needed]

In Japan, bamboo weaving is registered as a traditional Japanese craft (工芸, kōgei) with a range of fine and decorative arts.[citation needed]

Southeast Asia

 
A falaka crafted by the Bontoc people of the Philippines.

Southeast Asia has thousands of sophisticated forms of indigenous basketry produce, many of which use ethnic-endemic techniques. Materials used vary considerably, depending on the ethnic group and the basket art intended to be made. Bamboo, grass, banana, reeds, and trees are common mediums.[19][20][21]

Oceania

Polynesia

Basketry is a traditional practice across the Pacific islands of Polynesia. It uses natural materials like pandanus, coconut fibre, hibiscus fibre, and New Zealand flax according to local custom. Baskets are used for food and general storage, carrying personal goods, and fishing.[citation needed]

Australia

Basketry has been traditionally practised by the women of many Aboriginal Australian peoples across the continent for centuries.[22][23][24]

The Ngarrindjeri women of southern South Australia have a tradition of coiled basketry, using the sedge grasses growing near the lakes and mouth of the Murray River.[25]

The fibre basketry of the Gunditjmara people is noted as a cultural tradition, in the World Heritage Listing of the Budj Bim Cultural Landscape in western Victoria, Australia, used for carrying the short-finned eels that were farmed by the people in an extensive aquaculture system.[26]

North America

Native American Basketry

 
A Seri basket of the haat hanóohcö style, Sonora, Mexico

Native Americans traditionally make their baskets from the materials available locally.

Arctic and Subarctic

Arctic and Subarctic tribes use sea grasses for basketry. At the dawn of the 20th century, Inupiaq men began weaving baskets from baleen, a substance derived from whale jaws, and incorporating walrus ivory and whale bone in basketry.

Northeastern
 
Handmade kudzu basket made in the Appalachian Oriole style

In New England, they weave baskets from Swamp Ash. The wood is peeled off a felled log in strips, following the growth rings of the tree. Maine and Great Lakes tribes use black ash splints. They also weave baskets from sweet grass, as do Canadian tribes. Birchbark is used throughout the Subarctic, by a wide range of tribes from Dene to Ojibwa to Mi'kmaq. Birchbark baskets are often embellished with dyed porcupine quills. Some of the more notable styles are Nantucket Baskets and Williamsburg Baskets. Nantucket Baskets are large and bulky,[citation needed] while Williamsburg Baskets can be any size, so long as the two sides of the basket bow out slightly and get larger as it is woven up.

Southeastern

Southeastern tribes, such as the Atakapa, Cherokee, Choctaw, and Chitimacha, traditionally use split river cane for basketry. A particularly difficult technique for which these tribes are known is double-weave or double-wall basketry, in which each basketry is formed by an interior and exterior wall seamlessly woven together. Doubleweave, although rare, is still practiced today, for instance by Mike Dart (Cherokee Nation).[27]

Northwestern
 
A basket made by the Mono Lake Paiute - Kucadikadi (Northern Paiute) and Southern Sierra Miwok (Yosemite Miwok) artisan Lucy Telles

Northwestern tribes use spruce root, cedar bark, and swampgrass. Ceremonial basketry hats are particularly valued by Northeast tribes and are worn today at potlatches. Traditionally, women wove basketry hats, and men painted designs on them. Delores Churchill is a Haida from Alaska who began weaving in a time when Haida basketry was in decline, but she and others have ensured it will continue by teaching the next generation.

Californian and Great Basin
 
Native American basketweavers working in San Rafael, California in 2015
 
Pomo people girl's coiled dowry or puberty basket (kol-chu or ti-ri-bu-ku), late 19th century

Indigenous peoples of California and Great Basin are known for their basketry skills. Coiled baskets are particularly common, woven from sumac, yucca, willow, and basket rush. The works by Californian basket makers include many pieces in museums.

Southwestern
 
Traditional Tohono O'odham basketmaking, 1916
Mexico

In northwestern Mexico, the Seri people continue to "sew" baskets using splints of the limberbush plant, Jatropha cuneata.[citation needed]

Other North American Basketry

  • Matt Tommey is a North American artist who weaves sculptural baskets out of kudzu.[29]
  • Mary Jackson is a world-famous African-American sweetgrass basket weaver. In 2008, she was named a MacArthur Fellow for her basket weaving.[30]

Europe

In Greece, basket weaving is practiced by the anchorite monks of Mount Athos.

Africa

Senegal

Wolof baskets are a coil basket created by the Wolof tribe of Senegal.[31] These baskets is considered a women's craft, which have been passed across generations.[32] The Wolof baskets were traditionally made by using thin cuts of palm frond and a thick grass called njodax; however contemporary Wolof baskets often incorporate plastic as a replacement for the palm fronds and/or re-use of discarded prayer mat materials.[32] These baskets are strong and used for laundry hampers, planters, bowls, rugs, and more.[32]

South Africa

Zulu baskets are a traditional craft in the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa and were used for utilitarian purposes including holding water, beer, or food; the baskets can take many months to weave.[33][34] Starting in the late 1960s, Zulu basketry was a dying art form due to the introduction of tin and plastic water containers.[34] Kjell Lofroth, a Swedish minister living in South Africa, noticed a decline in the local crafts, and after a drought in the KwaZulu-Natal province and he formed the Vukani Arts Association (English: wake up and get going) to financially support single women and their families.[34] In this time period of the late 1960s, only three elderly women knew the craft of Zulu basket weaving but because of the Vukani Arts Association they taught others and revived the art.[34] Beauty Ngxongo is the most renowned living Zulu basket weaver.[35][34]

Zulu telephone wire baskets are a contemporary craft.[36] These are often brightly colored baskets and made with telephone wire (sometimes from a recycled source), which is a substitute for native grasses.[36]

See also

References

  1. ^ Verhoeven, M. (2000). "The small finds". In Verhoeven, M.; Akkermans, P.M.M.G. (eds.). Tell Sabi Abyad II: The Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Settlement. Leiden and Istanbul: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut. pp. 91–122.
  2. ^ Wendrich, W.; Ryan, P. (2012). "Phytoliths and basketry materials at Çatalhöyük (Turkey): timelines of growth, harvest and objects life histories". Paléorient. 38 (38.1–2): 55–63. doi:10.3406/paleo.2012.5458.
  3. ^ a b Schick, T. (1988). Bar-Yosef, O.; Alon, D. (eds.). "Nahal Hemar Cave: Basketry, Cordage and Fabrics". 'Atiqot. 18: 31–43.
  4. ^ Crowfoot, E. (1982). "Textiles, Matting and Basketry". In Kenyon, K. (ed.). Excavations at Jericho IV. British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem. pp. 546–550.
  5. ^ Kirkbride, D. (1967). "Beidha 1965: An Interim Report". Palestine Exploration Quarterly. 99 (1): 5–13. doi:10.1179/peq.1967.99.1.5.
  6. ^ Nieuwenhuyse, O.P.; Bartl, K.; Berghuijs, K.; Vogelsang-Eastwood, G.M. (2012). "The cord-impressed pottery from the Late Neolithic Northern Levant: Case-study Shir (Syria)". Paléorient. 38 (38): 65–77. doi:10.3406/paleo.2012.5459.
  7. ^ Duistermaat, K. (1996). "The seals and sealings". In Akkermans, P.M.M.G. (ed.). Tell Sabi Abyad: The Late Neolithic Settlement. Leiden and Istanbul: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut. pp. 339–401.
  8. ^ a b Bader, N.O. (1993). "Tell Maghzaliyah. An Early Neolithic Site in Northern Iraq". In Yoffee, N.; Clark, J.J. (eds.). Early Stages in the Evolution of Mesopotamion Civilization. Soviet Excavations in Northern Iraq. London and Tucson: University of Arizona Press. pp. 7–40.
  9. ^ Kirkbride, D. (1972). "Umm Dabaghiyah 1971: A preliminary report". Iraq. 34 (34): 3–15. doi:10.2307/4199926. JSTOR 4199926. S2CID 140549719.
  10. ^ Broman Morales, V. (1990). "Figurines and other clay objects from Sarab and Cayönü". In Braidwood, L.S.; Braidwood, R.J.; Howe, B.; Reed, C.A.; Watson, P.J. (eds.). Prehistoric Archaeology Along the Zagros Flanks. Chicago: Oriental Institute Publications. pp. 369–426.
  11. ^ Adovasio, J.M. (1975). "The Textile and Basketry Impressions from Jarmo". Paléorient. 3 (3): 223–230. doi:10.3406/paleo.1975.4198.
  12. ^ Hole, F.K.V.; Neely, J. (1969). Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Deh Luran Plain. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan.
  13. ^ a b c Erdly, Catherine. . Basket Weaving. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2008-05-08.
  14. ^ Diamond, Jared M. (2005). Guns, Germs, and Steel : The fates of human societies. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. p. 261. ISBN 978-0-393-06131-4. Nomadic hunter-gatherers are limited to technology that can be carried....You can't be burdened with pottery and printing presses as you shift camp....For example, the earliest attested precursors of ceramics are fired clay figurines made in the area of modern Czechoslovakia 27,000 years ago, long before the oldest known fired clay vessels (from Japan 14,000 years ago)....the oldest known basket appears around 13,000 years ago
  15. ^ "Oldest woven basket in the world found in Israel, dates back 10,000 years". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  16. ^ Lynch, Kate. "From cradle to grave: willows and basketmaking in Somerset". BBC. Retrieved 2008-05-09.
  17. ^ Seymour, John (1984). The Forgotten Arts A practical guide to traditional skills. Angus & Robertson Publishers. p. 54. ISBN 0-207-15007-9.
  18. ^ How I turned a deadly plant into a thriving business, Achenyo Idachaba, TED, May 2015, Retrieved 29 February 2016
  19. ^ Philippine basketry: an appreciation, RF Lane - 1986
  20. ^ Basketry Weaves and Bau-Malay Earthenware Pottery in Southeast Asia. WG Solheim II - Hukay, 2005
  21. ^ Weaving traditions from Island Southeast Asia: Historical Context and Etnobotanical knowledge. D Novellino, 2006
  22. ^ "About weaving". Maningrida. 1 March 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  23. ^ "History of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander textiles". archive.maas.museum. 9 April 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  24. ^ Mills, Vanessa (21 July 2011). "Weaving magical baskets and sharing Aboriginal knowledge". ABC Kimberley. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  25. ^ "Ngarrindjeri basket weaving". Sustainable Communities SA. 24 August 2016. Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  26. ^ "Budj Bim Cultural Landscape". UNESCO World Heritage Convention. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  27. ^ Cherokee basketry artist to be featured at Coffeyville gathering. News from Indian Country. 2008 (retrieved 23 May 2009)
  28. ^ a b "Washoe Basket Weavers | ONE". www.onlinenevada.org. Retrieved 2021-10-29.
  29. ^ "Weaving Kudzu into Art". Garden & Gun. 2016-11-28. Retrieved 2021-10-29.
  30. ^ "A Lowcountry Legend: Mary Jackson". Garden & Gun. Retrieved 2021-10-29.
  31. ^ Sallah, Tijan M. (1995-12-15). Wolof: (Senegal). The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-8239-1987-1.
  32. ^ a b c Nevins, Debbie; Berg, Elizabeth; Wan, Ruth (2018-07-15). Senegal. Cavendish Square Publishing, LLC. p. 101. ISBN 978-1-5026-3642-3.
  33. ^ "Lidded Basket ca. 1990". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
  34. ^ a b c d e Strickland, Carol (2012-12-13). "How Basketry Preserved a People". Christian Science Monitor. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
  35. ^ Chemaly, Tracy Lynn (July 7, 2021). "Beauty Ngxongo: Woven in Time". TLmagazine. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
  36. ^ a b Arment, David; Fick-Jordan, Marisa; Cerino, Andrew (2005). Wired: contemporary Zulu telephone-wire baskets. S/C Editions. p. 49.

Further reading

 
Basketry products, Bulgaria
  • Blanchard, M. M. (1928) The Basketry Book. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons
  • Bobart, H. H. (1936) Basket Work through the Ages. London: Oxford University Press
  • Okey, Thomas (1930) A Basketful of Memories: an autobiographical sketch. London: J. M. Dent
  • Okey, Thomas (1912) An Introduction to the Art of Basket-making. (Pitman's Handwork Series.) London: Pitman
  • Wright, Dorothy (1959) Baskets and Basketry. London: B. T. Batsford

External links

  • California Indian Basketweavers Association
  • The National Basketry Organization
  • The Book of English Trades, and Library of the Useful Arts, page 17-22
  • Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico. V. 1/4, page 132-135
  • Spons' Workshop: Basket hand-making
  • Native Paths: American Indian Art from the Collection of Charles and Valerie Diker, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (available as PDF), with material on basket weaving

basket, weaving, prehistoric, culture, basketmaker, culture, also, basketry, basket, making, process, weaving, sewing, pliable, materials, into, three, dimensional, artifacts, such, baskets, mats, mesh, bags, even, furniture, craftspeople, artists, specialized. For the prehistoric culture see Basketmaker culture Basket weaving also basketry or basket making is the process of weaving or sewing pliable materials into three dimensional artifacts such as baskets mats mesh bags or even furniture Craftspeople and artists specialized in making baskets may be known as basket makers and basket weavers Basket weaving is also a rural craft Artist Lucy Telles and large basket in Yosemite National Park 1933 A woman weaves a basket in Cameroon Woven bamboo basket for sale in K R Market Bangalore India Basketry is made from a variety of fibrous or pliable materials anything that will bend and form a shape Examples include pine straw willow oak wisteria forsythia vines stems animal hair hide grasses thread and fine wooden splints There are many applications for basketry from simple mats to hot air balloon gondolas Many Indigenous peoples are renowned for their basket weaving techniques Contents 1 History 1 1 Middle East 1 2 Industrial Revolution 1 3 World Wars 2 Types 3 Materials used in basketry 3 1 Vine 3 2 Wicker 4 Process 5 Basketry around the world 5 1 Asia 5 1 1 South Asia 5 1 2 East Asia 5 2 Southeast Asia 5 3 Oceania 5 3 1 Polynesia 5 3 2 Australia 5 4 North America 5 4 1 Native American Basketry 5 4 1 1 Arctic and Subarctic 5 4 1 2 Northeastern 5 4 1 3 Southeastern 5 4 1 4 Northwestern 5 4 1 5 Californian and Great Basin 5 4 1 6 Southwestern 5 4 1 7 Mexico 5 4 2 Other North American Basketry 5 5 Europe 5 6 Africa 5 6 1 Senegal 5 6 2 South Africa 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditWhile basket weaving is one of the widest spread crafts in the history of any human civilization it is hard to say just how old the craft is because natural materials like wood grass and animal remains decay naturally and constantly So without proper preservation much of the history of basket making has been lost and is simply speculated upon citation needed Middle East Edit The earliest reliable evidence for basket weaving technology in the Middle East comes from the Pre Pottery Neolithic phases of Tell Sabi Abyad II 1 and Catalhoyuk 2 Although no actual basketry remains were recovered impressions on floor surfaces and on fragments of bitumen suggest that basketry objects were used for storage and architectural purposes The extremely well preserved Early Neolithic ritual cave site of Nahal Hemar yielded thousands of intact perishable artefacts including basketry containers fabrics and various types of cordage 3 Additional Neolithic basketry impressions have been uncovered at Tell es Sultan Jericho 4 Netiv HaGdud 3 Beidha 5 Shir 6 Tell Sabi Abyad III 7 Domuztepe 8 Umm Dabaghiyah 9 Tell Maghzaliyah 8 Tepe Sarab 10 Jarmo 11 and Ali Kosh 12 The oldest known baskets were discovered in Faiyum in upper Egypt 13 and have been carbon dated to between 10 000 and 12 000 years old earlier than any established dates for archaeological evidence of pottery vessels which were too heavy and fragile to suit far ranging hunter gatherers 14 The oldest and largest complete basket discovered in the Negev in the Middle East dates to 10 500 years old 15 However baskets seldom survive as they are made from perishable materials The most common evidence of a knowledge of basketry is an imprint of the weave on fragments of clay pots formed by packing clay on the walls of the basket and firing Woven baskets made of rush and palm fronds Industrial Revolution Edit During the Industrial Revolution baskets were used in factories and for packing and deliveries Wicker furniture became fashionable in Victorian society citation needed World Wars Edit During the World Wars some pannier baskets were used for dropping supplies of ammunition and food to the troops 16 Types EditBasketry may be classified into four types 13 Coiled basketry using grasses rushes and pine needles Plaiting basketry using materials that are wide and braid like palms yucca or New Zealand flax Twining basketry using materials from roots and tree bark This is a weaving technique where two or more flexible weaving elements weavers cross each other as they weave through the stiffer radial spokes Wicker and Splint basketry using materials like reed cane willow oak and ashMaterials used in basketry Edit Bending vines for basket construction in Pohnpei Weaving with rattan core also known as reed is one of the more popular techniques being practiced because it is easily available 13 It is pliable and when woven correctly it is very sturdy Also while traditional materials like oak hickory and willow might be hard to come by reed is plentiful and can be cut into any size or shape that might be needed for a pattern This includes flat reed which is used for most square baskets oval reed which is used for many round baskets and round reed which is used to twine another advantage is that reed can also be dyed easily to look like oak or hickory citation needed Many types of plants can be used to create baskets dog rose honeysuckle blackberry briars once the thorns have been scraped off and many other creepers Willow was used for its flexibility and the ease with which it could be grown and harvested Willow baskets were commonly referred to as wickerwork in England 17 Water hyacinth is used as a base material in some areas where the plant has become a serious pest For example a group in Ibadan led by Achenyo Idachaba have been creating handicrafts in Nigeria 18 Vine Edit Because vines have always been readily accessible and plentiful for weavers they have been a common choice for basketry purposes The runners are preferable to the vine stems because they tend to be straighter Pliable materials like kudzu vine to more rigid woody vines like bittersweet grapevine honeysuckle wisteria and smokevine are good basket weaving materials Although many vines are not uniform in shape and size they can be manipulated and prepared in a way that makes them easily used in traditional and contemporary basketry Most vines can be split and dried to store until use Once vines are ready to be used they can be soaked or boiled to increase pliability citation needed Wicker Edit The type of baskets that reed is used for are most often referred to as wicker baskets though another popular type of weaving known as twining is also a technique used in most wicker baskets citation needed Popular styles of wicker baskets are vast but some of the more notable styles in the United States are Nantucket Baskets and Williamsburg Baskets Nantucket Baskets are large and bulky citation needed while Williamsburg Baskets can be any size so long as the two sides of the basket bow out slightly and get larger as it is weaved up citation needed Process EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The parts of a basket are the base the side walls and the rim A basket may also have a lid handle or embellishments Most baskets begin with a base The base can either be woven with reed or wooden A wooden base can come in many shapes to make a wide variety of shapes of baskets The static pieces of the work are laid down first In a round basket they are referred to as spokes in other shapes they are called stakes or staves Then the weavers are used to fill in the sides of a basket A wide variety of patterns can be made by changing the size colour or placement of a certain style of weave To achieve a multi coloured effect aboriginal artists first dye the twine and then weave the twines together in complex patterns Basketry around the world EditAsia Edit South Asia Edit Punjabi Basketmakers c 1905 Basketry exists throughout the Indian subcontinent Since palms are found in the south basket weaving with this material has a long tradition in Tamil Nadu and surrounding states citation needed East Asia Edit Basket making in Hainan China The material is bamboo strips Chinese bamboo weaving Taiwanese bamboo weaving Japanese bamboo weaving and Korean bamboo weaving go back centuries Bamboo is the prime material for making all sorts of baskets since it is the main material that is available and suitable for basketry Other materials that may be used are ratan and hemp palm citation needed In Japan bamboo weaving is registered as a traditional Japanese craft 工芸 kōgei with a range of fine and decorative arts citation needed Southeast Asia Edit A falaka crafted by the Bontoc people of the Philippines Southeast Asia has thousands of sophisticated forms of indigenous basketry produce many of which use ethnic endemic techniques Materials used vary considerably depending on the ethnic group and the basket art intended to be made Bamboo grass banana reeds and trees are common mediums 19 20 21 Oceania Edit Polynesia Edit Basketry is a traditional practice across the Pacific islands of Polynesia It uses natural materials like pandanus coconut fibre hibiscus fibre and New Zealand flax according to local custom Baskets are used for food and general storage carrying personal goods and fishing citation needed Australia Edit Basketry has been traditionally practised by the women of many Aboriginal Australian peoples across the continent for centuries 22 23 24 The Ngarrindjeri women of southern South Australia have a tradition of coiled basketry using the sedge grasses growing near the lakes and mouth of the Murray River 25 The fibre basketry of the Gunditjmara people is noted as a cultural tradition in the World Heritage Listing of the Budj Bim Cultural Landscape in western Victoria Australia used for carrying the short finned eels that were farmed by the people in an extensive aquaculture system 26 North America Edit Native American Basketry Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Basket weaving news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A Seri basket of the haat hanoohco style Sonora Mexico Native Americans traditionally make their baskets from the materials available locally Arctic and Subarctic Edit Arctic and Subarctic tribes use sea grasses for basketry At the dawn of the 20th century Inupiaq men began weaving baskets from baleen a substance derived from whale jaws and incorporating walrus ivory and whale bone in basketry Northeastern Edit Handmade kudzu basket made in the Appalachian Oriole style In New England they weave baskets from Swamp Ash The wood is peeled off a felled log in strips following the growth rings of the tree Maine and Great Lakes tribes use black ash splints They also weave baskets from sweet grass as do Canadian tribes Birchbark is used throughout the Subarctic by a wide range of tribes from Dene to Ojibwa to Mi kmaq Birchbark baskets are often embellished with dyed porcupine quills Some of the more notable styles are Nantucket Baskets and Williamsburg Baskets Nantucket Baskets are large and bulky citation needed while Williamsburg Baskets can be any size so long as the two sides of the basket bow out slightly and get larger as it is woven up Kelly Church Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians Southeastern Edit Southeastern tribes such as the Atakapa Cherokee Choctaw and Chitimacha traditionally use split river cane for basketry A particularly difficult technique for which these tribes are known is double weave or double wall basketry in which each basketry is formed by an interior and exterior wall seamlessly woven together Doubleweave although rare is still practiced today for instance by Mike Dart Cherokee Nation 27 Rowena Bradley Cherokee Nation Mike Dart Cherokee Nation Northwestern Edit A basket made by the Mono Lake Paiute Kucadikadi Northern Paiute and Southern Sierra Miwok Yosemite Miwok artisan Lucy Telles See also Salish weaving Chilkat weaving and Quinault people Basketry and weaving Northwestern tribes use spruce root cedar bark and swampgrass Ceremonial basketry hats are particularly valued by Northeast tribes and are worn today at potlatches Traditionally women wove basketry hats and men painted designs on them Delores Churchill is a Haida from Alaska who began weaving in a time when Haida basketry was in decline but she and others have ensured it will continue by teaching the next generation Delores Churchill Haida Joe Feddersen Colville Boeda Strand Snohomish Californian and Great Basin Edit Native American basketweavers working in San Rafael California in 2015 Pomo people girl s coiled dowry or puberty basket kol chu or ti ri bu ku late 19th century Indigenous peoples of California and Great Basin are known for their basketry skills Coiled baskets are particularly common woven from sumac yucca willow and basket rush The works by Californian basket makers include many pieces in museums Elsie Allen Pomo people Mary Knight Benson Pomo people William Ralganal Benson Pomo people Carrie Bethel Mono Lake Paiute Loren Bommelyn Tolowa Nellie Charlie Mono Lake Paiute Kucadikadi Louisa Keyser Dat So La Lee Washoe people is arguably the most famous Native American weaver 28 Lena Frank Dick 1889 1965 Washoe people followed behind Keyser by one generation and her baskets were frequently mistaken for Keyser s 28 L Frank Tongva Acagchemem Mabel McKay Pomo people Essie Pinola Parrish Kashaya Pomo Lucy Telles Mono Lake Paiute Kucadikadi Southwestern Edit Annie Antone Tohono O odham Damian Jim Navajo Terrol Dew Johnson Tohono O odham Traditional Tohono O odham basketmaking 1916 Mexico Edit Main article Basketry of Mexico In northwestern Mexico the Seri people continue to sew baskets using splints of the limberbush plant Jatropha cuneata citation needed Other North American Basketry Edit Matt Tommey is a North American artist who weaves sculptural baskets out of kudzu 29 Mary Jackson is a world famous African American sweetgrass basket weaver In 2008 she was named a MacArthur Fellow for her basket weaving 30 Europe Edit In Greece basket weaving is practiced by the anchorite monks of Mount Athos Africa Edit Senegal Edit Wolof baskets are a coil basket created by the Wolof tribe of Senegal 31 These baskets is considered a women s craft which have been passed across generations 32 The Wolof baskets were traditionally made by using thin cuts of palm frond and a thick grass called njodax however contemporary Wolof baskets often incorporate plastic as a replacement for the palm fronds and or re use of discarded prayer mat materials 32 These baskets are strong and used for laundry hampers planters bowls rugs and more 32 South Africa Edit Zulu baskets are a traditional craft in the KwaZulu Natal province of South Africa and were used for utilitarian purposes including holding water beer or food the baskets can take many months to weave 33 34 Starting in the late 1960s Zulu basketry was a dying art form due to the introduction of tin and plastic water containers 34 Kjell Lofroth a Swedish minister living in South Africa noticed a decline in the local crafts and after a drought in the KwaZulu Natal province and he formed the Vukani Arts Association English wake up and get going to financially support single women and their families 34 In this time period of the late 1960s only three elderly women knew the craft of Zulu basket weaving but because of the Vukani Arts Association they taught others and revived the art 34 Beauty Ngxongo is the most renowned living Zulu basket weaver 35 34 Zulu telephone wire baskets are a contemporary craft 36 These are often brightly colored baskets and made with telephone wire sometimes from a recycled source which is a substitute for native grasses 36 See also EditNative American basket weavers Basketry of Mexico Elizabeth Hickox Fully feathered basket Pecos Classification Putcher Sebucan Underwater basket weaving Willow Man Withy Easter basket Amakan Kete basket References Edit Verhoeven M 2000 The small finds In Verhoeven M Akkermans P M M G eds Tell Sabi Abyad II The Pre Pottery Neolithic B Settlement Leiden and Istanbul Nederlands Historisch Archaeologisch Instituut pp 91 122 Wendrich W Ryan P 2012 Phytoliths and basketry materials at Catalhoyuk Turkey timelines of growth harvest and objects life histories Paleorient 38 38 1 2 55 63 doi 10 3406 paleo 2012 5458 a b Schick T 1988 Bar Yosef O Alon D eds Nahal Hemar Cave Basketry Cordage and Fabrics Atiqot 18 31 43 Crowfoot E 1982 Textiles Matting and Basketry In Kenyon K ed Excavations at Jericho IV British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem pp 546 550 Kirkbride D 1967 Beidha 1965 An Interim Report Palestine Exploration Quarterly 99 1 5 13 doi 10 1179 peq 1967 99 1 5 Nieuwenhuyse O P Bartl K Berghuijs K Vogelsang Eastwood G M 2012 The cord impressed pottery from the Late Neolithic Northern Levant Case study Shir Syria Paleorient 38 38 65 77 doi 10 3406 paleo 2012 5459 Duistermaat K 1996 The seals and sealings In Akkermans P M M G ed Tell Sabi Abyad The Late Neolithic Settlement Leiden and Istanbul Nederlands Historisch Archaeologisch Instituut pp 339 401 a b Bader N O 1993 Tell Maghzaliyah An Early Neolithic Site in Northern Iraq In Yoffee N Clark J J eds Early Stages in the Evolution of Mesopotamion Civilization Soviet Excavations in Northern Iraq London and Tucson University of Arizona Press pp 7 40 Kirkbride D 1972 Umm Dabaghiyah 1971 A preliminary report Iraq 34 34 3 15 doi 10 2307 4199926 JSTOR 4199926 S2CID 140549719 Broman Morales V 1990 Figurines and other clay objects from Sarab and Cayonu In Braidwood L S Braidwood R J Howe B Reed C A Watson P J eds Prehistoric Archaeology Along the Zagros Flanks Chicago Oriental Institute Publications pp 369 426 Adovasio J M 1975 The Textile and Basketry Impressions from Jarmo Paleorient 3 3 223 230 doi 10 3406 paleo 1975 4198 Hole F K V Neely J 1969 Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Deh Luran Plain Ann Arbor University of Michigan a b c Erdly Catherine History Basket Weaving Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Retrieved 2008 05 08 Diamond Jared M 2005 Guns Germs and Steel The fates of human societies New York W W Norton amp Company Inc p 261 ISBN 978 0 393 06131 4 Nomadic hunter gatherers are limited to technology that can be carried You can t be burdened with pottery and printing presses as you shift camp For example the earliest attested precursors of ceramics are fired clay figurines made in the area of modern Czechoslovakia 27 000 years ago long before the oldest known fired clay vessels from Japan 14 000 years ago the oldest known basket appears around 13 000 years ago Oldest woven basket in the world found in Israel dates back 10 000 years The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 20 March 2021 Lynch Kate From cradle to grave willows and basketmaking in Somerset BBC Retrieved 2008 05 09 Seymour John 1984 The Forgotten Arts A practical guide to traditional skills Angus amp Robertson Publishers p 54 ISBN 0 207 15007 9 How I turned a deadly plant into a thriving business Achenyo Idachaba TED May 2015 Retrieved 29 February 2016 Philippine basketry an appreciation RF Lane 1986 Basketry Weaves and Bau Malay Earthenware Pottery in Southeast Asia WG Solheim II Hukay 2005 Weaving traditions from Island Southeast Asia Historical Context and Etnobotanical knowledge D Novellino 2006 About weaving Maningrida 1 March 2017 Retrieved 25 January 2020 History of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander textiles archive maas museum 9 April 2017 Retrieved 25 January 2020 Mills Vanessa 21 July 2011 Weaving magical baskets and sharing Aboriginal knowledge ABC Kimberley Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 25 January 2020 Ngarrindjeri basket weaving Sustainable Communities SA 24 August 2016 Retrieved 25 January 2020 Budj Bim Cultural Landscape UNESCO World Heritage Convention Retrieved 18 March 2020 Cherokee basketry artist to be featured at Coffeyville gathering News from Indian Country 2008 retrieved 23 May 2009 a b Washoe Basket Weavers ONE www onlinenevada org Retrieved 2021 10 29 Weaving Kudzu into Art Garden amp Gun 2016 11 28 Retrieved 2021 10 29 A Lowcountry Legend Mary Jackson Garden amp Gun Retrieved 2021 10 29 Sallah Tijan M 1995 12 15 Wolof Senegal The Rosen Publishing Group Inc p 49 ISBN 978 0 8239 1987 1 a b c Nevins Debbie Berg Elizabeth Wan Ruth 2018 07 15 Senegal Cavendish Square Publishing LLC p 101 ISBN 978 1 5026 3642 3 Lidded Basket ca 1990 The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 2022 03 29 a b c d e Strickland Carol 2012 12 13 How Basketry Preserved a People Christian Science Monitor ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 2022 03 29 Chemaly Tracy Lynn July 7 2021 Beauty Ngxongo Woven in Time TLmagazine Retrieved 2022 03 29 a b Arment David Fick Jordan Marisa Cerino Andrew 2005 Wired contemporary Zulu telephone wire baskets S C Editions p 49 Further reading Edit Basketry products Bulgaria Blanchard M M 1928 The Basketry Book New York Charles Scribner s Sons Bobart H H 1936 Basket Work through the Ages London Oxford University Press Okey Thomas 1930 A Basketful of Memories an autobiographical sketch London J M Dent Okey Thomas 1912 An Introduction to the Art of Basket making Pitman s Handwork Series London Pitman Wright Dorothy 1959 Baskets and Basketry London B T BatsfordExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basketry Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about basket weaving California Indian Basketweavers Association The National Basketry Organization The Book of English Trades and Library of the Useful Arts page 17 22 Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico V 1 4 page 132 135 Spons Workshop Basket hand making Native Paths American Indian Art from the Collection of Charles and Valerie Diker an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art available as PDF with material on basket weaving Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Basket weaving amp oldid 1131910365, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.