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Totem Pole Carving
by Vickie Jensen

Product Description
The totem pole - in all its power and beauty - is a distinctive and widely recognized form of traditional Northwest Coast Native art. Once nearly lost, this art form is liave and thriving today. In this unique book, Vickie Jensen collaborates with renowned Nisga'a artist Norman Tait and his crew of young carvers to document the actual process of bringing a log to life. First is the selection of the raw cedar log for the planned 42-foot totem pole. Then the arduous three-month-long process of designing and carving the huge log. The intimate text and 125 photographs capture the charged atmosphere in which the pole is carved - the small is fresh cedar chips, the long days and blistered hands, the camaraderie, the pride in solving problems, the ever-present awareness of tradition, the joy of creation. Norman Tait teaches his apprentices that carving a pole requires more than time and labour, more than artistic and emotional commitment, more than a grasp of tools and techniques. The process involves their cultural background and very being. The apprentices must make their own carving tools, design their regalia, and practice traditional songs, dances and drumming. All these experiences culminate in the traditional ceremonies to celebrate the raising of the completed totem pole. Vickie Jensen is a writer, editor and photographer who has worked for twenty-five years on Native reserves. She and her husband, Jay Powell, produced more than thirty schoolbooks in a variety of Native languages as part of programs to preserve their heritage. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre Ltd., 1992.
Size: 176p
Style: paperback