Ed Eugene Carriere (Suquamish): NEA National Heritage Fellows Tribute Video (2023)
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- Опубликовано: 5 май 2024
- Learn how Ed Eugene Carriere (Suquamish)’s great-grandmother and more than 225 generations of his ancestors from the Suquamish Tribe taught him the 4,500-year-old art of Salish basketry. From Indianola, Washington, Carriere weaves the tale of using the clam-gathering baskets he creates to pass on the deep-rooted cultural and artistic heritage of the Salish Sea and its peoples to the next generation.
For more on the NEA National Heritage Fellowships: www.arts.gov/honors/heritage
Wonderful tribute to a man, his culture, traditions and ancestors .
I love Ed. I love his stories how his mother who was very young when she had him, gave him to her
grandmother (I think, I'll watch it again. Everything about him, his land his weaving, his love for nature
makes me nostalgic for times when we went in the so called bush and gathered, wild asparagus, berries, fruit that I have never seen anywhere in all the countries we lived in. How much we appreciated a wooden spoon, a chair, logs for the fire, a match, a bambus rod for fishing, everything was meaningful, magical, purposeful. Thank you.
My grandma and my mom show me how to do those baskets.the best
How are I wish I could make just one basket. I was never shown how to do it because I lived in the big city and I was a white girl. Years later when I moved to a small town in Nebraska I met a wonderful Omaha medicine woman Who was willing to teach me but she lived in Kansas and I had no transportation to get to her home. She died and took all of her talents and learning with her. I love you Mrs. Wamego and I miss you.❤
Ed is a treasure for living beings to remember our ancestors and humanity….❤
Gorgeous tribute to an incredible man.
What a beautiful and poignant tribute to an inspiring man .. and his inspiring great grandmother.
Will Ed be able to pass this land down to a child or sibling? What will happen to the land if not?