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  2. Birchbark biting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birchbark_biting

    Birchbark biting (Ojibwe: Mazinibaganjigan, plural: mazinibaganjiganan) is an Indigenous artform made by Anishinaabeg, including Ojibwe people, [1] Potawatomi, and Odawa, as well as Cree [2] and other Algonquian peoples of the Subarctic and Great Lakes regions of Canada and the United States.

  3. Visual arts of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_arts_of_the...

    The Island of Marajó, at the mouth of the Amazon River was a major center of ceramic traditions as early as 1000 CE [45] and continues to produce ceramics today, characterized by cream-colored bases painted with linear, geometric designs of red, black, and white slips.

  4. Kelly Church - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelly_Church

    Kelly Jean Church, a fifth-generation basket maker, was born in 1967. She grew up in southwestern Michigan. Her mother is of English and Irish heritage, and her father is of Potawatomi, Odawa, and Ojibwe heritage.

  5. A-na-cam-e-gish-ca (Aanakamigishkaang / "[Traces of] Foot Prints [upon the Ground]"), Rainy Lake Ojibwe chief, painted by Charles Bird King during the 1826 Treaty of Fond du Lac & published in History of the Indian Tribes of North America.

  6. Maude Kegg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maude_Kegg

    Maude Mitchell was born in a dark wigwam in August of 1904 in Crow Wing County, Minnesota, near Portage Lake, a few miles northwest of Mille Lacs Lake. [2] Her parents were Charles Mitchell, a member of the non-Removable Mille Lacs Indians of the Adik-doodem, and his wife, Nancy Pine.

  7. Benjamin Chee Chee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Chee_Chee

    Chee Chee's first exhibition was held in 1973 at the University of Ottawa, [2] and featured abstract compositions of block-stamped geometric motifs. [3] By 1976 he had gained recognition as he developed his style of clear graceful lines and minimal colour, depicting birds and animals.

  8. Wiigwaasabak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiigwaasabak

    A wiigwaasabak (in Anishinaabe syllabics: ᐐᒀᓴᐸᒃ, plural: wiigwaasabakoon ᐐᒀᓴᐸᑰᓐ) is a birch bark scroll, on which the Ojibwa (Anishinaabe) people of North America wrote with a written language composed of complex geometrical patterns and shapes.

  9. Bagh print - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagh_Print

    Bagh print motifs are typically geometric, paisley, or floral compositions design, dyed with vegetable colours of red and black over a white background, and is a popular textile printing product. Its name is derived from the village Bagh located on the banks of the Bagh River. [1] [2] Bagh hand block print artist at work