Saturday 29 October 2016

Pilioko

Aloi Pilioko is an artist who lives in Vanuatu. He actually comes from the neighbouring archipelago named Tuvalu but now lives in Port Vila. I visited him in his home. Quite interesting interior (and exterior) design there.  









Saturday 22 October 2016

I didn't climb Uluru!

Uluru is a sacred mountain of the Aborigines. They ask visitors not to climb it. Many people climb it anyway. To me it seems comparable to going into a church and sitting on an altar. After all if we don't believe in God then what's the problem? Anyway I think the top of the mountain is the worst place to be because you miss the best sight, which is the mountain itself. The pictures here are from a trail around it. 









Friday 14 October 2016

Indian boats at Fort Rupert.

Fort Rupert is a little Indian Reservation on the northern tip on Vanouver Island. It shouldn't be confused with Prince Rupert, which is a port town much further north, at the mouth of the Skeena river. 
The boats are not here all the time. In the summer 2014 there was a rally of traditional Indian paddling boats in Bella Bella and the boats from the south passed Fort Rupert on their way and stopped for the night. I happened to be there and thought that the boats on the beach at sunset look pretty photogenic. So I took some pictures and here they are.










Sunday 9 October 2016

An Indian village in British Columbia

Indians of British Columbia in the old days lived in big solid houses built with cedar planks and totem poles marked their entrances. The houses were big enough for several families to live in, with the chief occupying a prominent place richly decorated with sculpture or painting. Nowadays the Indians live like all Canadians in normal houses with a car on a driveway. However, in some places reconstructions of the old style houses have been made for tourists to see. 
 The village of Ksan near the town of Hazelton is such a reconstruction. Nobody lives there, it is an open air museum. It is situated in the upper valley of the Skeena river, in the Canadian Rockies. The totem poles look very picturesque on the background of snowy peaks.










Saturday 1 October 2016

Haida totem poles

Few people realise that totem pole sculpture has several styles, depending on the tribe. The two best documented styles are Kwakiutl and Haida. The Haida are the tribe that lives on what used to be called the Queen Charlotte Islands and is now officially called Haida Gwaii. During the epidemics of 19th century some 90% of the tribe died out leaving deserted villages full of totem poles. In the humid climate of the islands the villages, including the poles, slowly disintegrated. However, in the 1950s some of those rotting totem poles were taken to museums, where they are kept in dry air to stop any further decay. They can be seen in the Museum of Anthropology in Vancouver and in the Haida Heritage Centre in the village of Skidagate at Haida Gwaii. They are well preserved there but one can also see the totem poles slowly rotting away in the deserted villages.
In the first half of the 20th century the practice of totem pole carving almost disappeared. It was revived in the second half of the century due to the academic interest at first. In 1965 an art historian Bill Holm published a book about the totem pole carving and clearly identified features of each tribe style. Since then many poles in traditional styles have been produced. They can be seen in parks of many cities of British Columbia. Here, however, are the 19th century originals preserved in museums. Only the last picture shows a pole left in its natural setting in the deserted village of Skedans.