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[Basket: rivercane, storage]
[Basket: rivercane, storage]
Title[Basket: rivercane, storage]
IdentifierQACM_1992_046
Formatcraft object
Date Createdunknown
Dimensions22" x 19" x 20"
DescriptionThis large rivercane storage basket was made by Edmund Youngbird (1922-1995). Baskets such as these were made to store domestic goods, from dry foodstuffs to clothing. The natural aeration of the single weave allows the stored goods to remain dry. The basket is woven from rivercane that was dyed with butternut and bloodroot, plants native to the region. The butternut-dyed rivercane is brown; the fainter orange cane is from bloodroot. The basket is woven upward from a rectangular base with a central dominant design set on the diagonal. The circumference of the basket tapers inward before flaring out again at the rim. A series of bands surrounds the top third of the basket, alternating between butternut and bloodroot dyed cane in a linked Chain design. Traditionally Cherokee basket makers are women; Youngbird being one of the few male weavers. Youngbird learned to weave rivercane baskets from his grandmother, Lizzie "Nannie" Stamper Youngbird.
Subject - TopicHandicraft -- Appalachian Region, Southern
Subject - CraftBasketwork -- Appalachian Region, Southern
Cherokee baskets -- Appalachian Region, Southern
Craft Categorybasketry
CountyCherokee Indian Reservation, N.C.
CreatorYoungbird, Edmund, 1922-1995
Source InstitutionQualla Arts & Crafts Mutual
CollectionArtifact Collection
Copyright InformationAll rights reserved. Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual, Inc., Cherokee, North Carolina.;
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