In
many ways, Vivian Ross is like her baskets -- at the heart of
each one is cedar and a tradition that goes back thousands of
years. Also woven into each basket are strands and colors that
reflect the other influences that have shaped her life.
Before
she was born, Vivian's mother, Anna Benson, lived in the Aleut
Village of Katmai. Anna and her family were forced to relocate
after Mt. Katmai erupted in 1912 and buried the village in over
six feet of ash. They relocated to Bristol Bay, where Anna attended
the missionary boarding school. It was here that Anna learned
to blend her Aleut art with the Yup'ik style of weaving that was
prevalent in this area.
Anna
became an accomplished basket weaver and passed this knowledge
on to Vivian. Unfortunately, Anna passed away before seeing her
daughter take up the traditional basketweaving of her ancestors.
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"We
called our mother, Anna Strongwoman," said Vivian. "The first
baskets I made bear her traditional motifs, a thunderbird
and deer. My mother would be proud if she could see what I'm
doing today." Later, Vivian would add another pattern from
her family -- her stepfather Benny Benson's design that became
the Alaska State flag. |
Vivian
grew up in Alaska and later spent time in the Hawaiian Islands
and Guam. Today, Vivian lives in Oregon, visiting Alaska whenever
possible. "I loved the colors in baskets from the Pacific Islands,"
says Vivian. "It's one of the reasons I enjoy experimenting with
different colors, textures and materials."
She
creates beautiful baskets from natural materials she gathers and
prepares. Vivian spends months collecting, soaking and trimming
the grasses and barks, curing most of them for three to six months.
Cedar is the basis for almost all of her baskets, medicine pouches
and quivers. Most of her baskets begin with a plaited center,
accented with rows of twined grasses. She gathers the raw cedar
bark early in the spring when the sap is running from living trees.
She also uses bark from downed trees, soaking it for a day or
two until scraping and cutting will separate the outer bark. The
bark is coiled when wet and then cured for six to eight months.
To
gather materials, Vivian travels the Northwest. She gathers brown
runners from the wild strawberry plants on the Oregon coast, white
bear grass which only grows in the Cascade Range, and sweetgrass
that must be handpicked in June and handled with care to prevent
breakage. She gathers bear grass one strand at a time, and never
more than eight or ten strands from any one clump. She also likes
to use white and black seaweed from the coast, dark and light
cherry bark that she scrubs to a high gloss, cat tails, green
crocosmia leaves, green day lily leaves, white yucca leaves and
even some grasses she grows in front of her house.
Vivian
is a member of the Northwest Native American Basketweavers Association,
the Columbia Basin Basketry Guild and is a registered artist with
the Alaska Silver Hand program. In addition to her baskets, Viv
also dries and paints gourds, and produces stained glass with
Indian designs.