Bandolier bag
Bandolier bag
Bandolier bag
Loom-woven seed bead geometric and otter-tail design, silk ribbon & bias tape edging, functional lined pocket, 21 beaded tabs, yarn strands with tube beads
Summary of available information
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Fabric, cotton, black & checked (blue, red, white, & tan); Bias tape, silk, red; Bias tape, cotton, tan; Yarn, emerald & garnet; Beads, tubular, red (transparent garnet) & green (transparent pine); Beads, seed, clear, white (opaque), black (opaque), brown (transparent medium brown), red (transparent scarlet, opaque dusty rose), green (transparent teal, transparent pine, opaque medium green), blue (opaque medium blue, opaque blueberry).
Hand sewn; Loom-woven beadwork; Overlay spot stitched appliqué beadwork; Outer borders edged with red silk ribbon; Inner border of straps edged with brown bias tape; Pouch lined with blue, brown, red and white checked cotton; Decorative panel above pouch; Straps have same type decoration as pouch and decorative panel; Bottom fringe is twenty-one loom-woven beaded tabs with tube beads on yarn tassels.
Sides bordered with one row blue seed bead otter tail decoration, top bordered with five rows of same decoration; Loom woven seed bead geometric decoration on pink field, design vertically symmetrical; Design on both straps almost symmetrical; Design elements: geometric otter tail, feather, hourglass, diamond, cross, rectangle, hexagon, flower?; Bottom fringe is twenty-one woven beaded tabs, each with two strands green and blue faceted tube beads tied to red and green yarn; Tab design is geometric, repeated from centre out.
"Bandolier bags most likely originated in the Upper Great Lakes region during the 1840s and 1850s. Fashioned exclusively from European materials and adorned with thousands of beads, bandolier bags were primarily for show, as a symbol of identity, wealth and status. Although initially functional, by the late 19th and early 20th centuries many of the bags had false pockets or none at all. Sometimes called "friendship bags", they were often created as gifts to strengthen relationships within communities or between nations. By the 1870s they had become an important element of formal dress worn mainly at ceremonies and celebrations by men, and occasionally by women. They wore them - singly or several at a time - crossed over the torso or draped around the neck. The wearing of more than one bag was generally the prerogative of a leader or a person of high honour." (McCord, 2013) Bandoliers were adopted by Ojibwa in 19th century after seeing bullet pouches used by British soldiers. Bullet pouches were plain and decorated with crest or coat of arms. When idea adopted by Ojibwa, they were greatly prized and highly decorated ceremonial accessories. They became so highly prized by Ojibwa and other tribes (especially Sioux), that one bandolier could be traded for one pony. They became a status symbol of highest ranking Midewiwin priests.
Provenance
McCord Museum, Wearing Our Identity. Montreal: The McCord Museum, 2013; and “Beads: Their Use By Upper Great Lakes Indians” by Richard Flanders, 1977
McCord Museum. Wearing Our Identity. Montreal: The McCord Museum, 2013. Print.
About This GRASAC Record
Manitoba Museum
Content from the Manitoba Museum's catalog records. Uploaded by Orvis Starkweather as part of their summer internship.