tray, wiigwaas and sweetgrass
tray, wiigwaas and sweetgrass
tray, wiigwaas and sweetgrass
This is relative is an Anishinaabe (possibly Ojibwe) wiigwaas (birchbark) and sweetgrass tray, from Northern Michigan. It has a floral motif in the center made from kaawyikewin (quillwork).
This relative was collected by Amos H. Gottschall between 1871 and 1905. His collection was likely left to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (ANS) sometime before 1937. ANS formally gifted the collection to the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in 1997, where this relative currently resides.
"Chippewa" (Ojibwe) is written on the catalogue card.
The information in this record is based on museum documentation.
Read More About This Relative
birch bark; porcupine quills natural and dyed green, orange, pink, dark purple, light purple; purple/blue; sweetgrass; dark thread
A circular bottom made of birch bark around which are rows of bunched sweetgrass wrapped with dark thread. One row of sweetgrass is done in an undulating line. The top and inner bottom rows of bunched sweetgrass also have coloured quills wrapped in with them. There are double tacks with quills on the bottom.
There is a floral design made from kaawyikewin (quillwork).
Possibly in a pair with Penn 97-84-140.
Gottschall collected between 1871 and 1905.
Provenance
The tray was collected by Amos H. Gottschall between 1871 and 1905. His collection was likely left to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (ANS) sometime before 1937. ANS formally gifted the collection to the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in 1997, where this relative currently resides.
Museum documentation.
Gottschall, Amos H. Priced and Descriptive Catalogue of the Utensils, Implements, Weapons, Ornaments, Etc., of the Indians, Mound Builders, Cliff Dwellers: Typical Collections No. 2. 1909. (See: II 265)
About This GRASAC Record
Maker, Name unrecorded. Tray, wiigwaas and sweetgrass. GRASAC ID 25526. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 97-84-139.
This information was gathered during a GRASAC research visit to the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology on May 6, 2010.
This record was augmented by Joy Kruse on March 5, 2025.
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