Why Buying Authentic Indigenous Art is Important August 11, 2017 A newsletter reader sent us a message asking if we would write something about appropriated art. The topic of cultural appropriation is increasingly making headlines, and 2017 so far has been rife with controversies. In one aspect, the fact that there is such a concentrated discussion in mainstream and social media is, I think, the silver lining to this particular cloud. The other view of the cloud is how troubling it is that this affront to Indigenous culture is ongoing despite the coverage in mainstream media.
The picture above was taken in a store in downtown Victoria on a street populated with stores that cater to tourists. Every store we entered had the same, or similar, items for sale and every store we entered was bursting with tourists from Asia and Europe. It was disheartening to think that these knock off items were going out into the world as representatives of Indigenous art from Canada. Indigenous art has been coveted ever since European contact with Indigenous Peoples, when explorers were instructed to collect "exotic curiosities" such as ceremonial regalia, clothing and tools. That desire to possess a piece of ‘wild’ or ‘exotic’ art unfortunately led to the manipulation of situations or outright pillage from communities, sometimes when they were at their most vulnerable, struggling with epidemics, famine or poverty. Some villages that were empty because of disease or forced relocation were looted. The Indian Act made potlatches illegal (1880 - 1951) but some potlatch families defied the law and were subjected to raids, imprisonment, and confiscation of masks and regalia, which were often sold to collectors and/or sold and donated to museums. Today, the copying or theft of Indigenous art is less dramatic but more pervasive. Sales of knockoff items created in Canada, and offshore, are rampant across the country. “80% of Aboriginal art and giftware has nothing to do with Aboriginal People, there is no Aboriginal involvement. It’s like they’ve taken a cliche of a design and splashed it on mugs and backpacks….all the resources have gone to non-Aboriginal companies or persons. In Canada the most marginalized and impoverished communities are Aboriginal communities and we’re hoping that the consumer wants to make sure that that is alleviated by purchase of our own art, which is our gift to you. We want you to have the real thing, there is meaning in our art work. ” Shain Jackson, Coast Salish artist