By KORRY KEEKER
JUNEAU EMPIRE
Longtime Kake
fisherman Clarence
Jackson, 71, has
served on the
board of Sealaska
Heritage Institute
for almost 20
years and is a
respected elder
and oral
historian. But he
was humbled when
the National
Museum of the
American Indian
invited him to
curate the Tlingit
section of
"Listening to Our
Ancestors: The Art
of Native Life
along the North
Pacific Coast," an
11-community
exhibit that opens
at noon Friday in
Washington, D.C.
"I feel very
inadequate,"
Jackson said. "I'm
not an artist, but
I know a little
about the Indian
art from way back
and from now. This
is something new
to me, and I'm
learning a lot.
I'm enjoying it
immensely."
"Listening to
Our Ancestors"
will include more
than 400 items
from Alaska,
Washington state
and British
Columbia. It will
be the second show
in the Changing
Exhibitions
Gallery since the
museum opened in
September 2004,
and it will be on
display until Jan.
2, 2007.
The exhibit
includes Tsimshian
items from Prince
Rupert, British
Columbia, and
Haida collections
from three
communities,
including Hydaburg.
The other
communities in the
exhibit are Coast
Salish, Makah,
Nuu-chah-nulth (Nootkan),
Kwakwaka'wakw (Kwakiutl),Heiltsuk
(Bella Bella),
Bella Bella (Waglisa),
Nuxalk (Bella
Coola), Gitxsan
and Nisga'a.
Eventually,
each section of
the exhibit will
travel to the
community it
represents. The
dates and
locations have not
been finalized.
"By inviting
the tribes to help
develop the
exhibition, an
important
partnership and
dialogue has
emerged through
which the museum,
the communities
and visitors can
learn about the
cultures from the
North Pacific
Coast," said
museum founder W.
Richard West Jr.,
in a press
release.
Museum staff
and Northwest
Coast scholars Jay
Stewart and Peter
Macnair invited
curators from each
community to help
assemble the show
out of contents
from the museum's
collection.
Jackson visited
the museum for its
grand opening
celebration in
2004 on the
National Mall.
He's returned
twice since then,
including an April
2005 visit with
Yakutat elder
George Ramos,
Haida artist
Delores Churchill,
Angoon elder Peter
Jack and Sealaska
Heritage Institute
president Rosita
Worl. The group
looked at items in
the Smithsonian
Institution
collection that
will be brought to
the Anchorage
Museum of History
and Art in 2009
for a long-term
exhibition. The
National Museum of
the American
Indian is under
the Smithsonian
umbrella of
museums.
Jackson also
visited with a
group from Kake to
look at items that
could be
repatriated in the
future.
"Like everybody
else, we have
things that need
to be repatriated,
and we're still
working on all of
those things,"
Jackson said.
"There were quite
a bit of small
items, a lot of
stuff that maybe
came from
cemeteries, and
that's a very
delicate subject,"
Jackson said. "We
have to think
about whether or
not someone should
take something
from a cemetery.
Things like that,
the museum should
really return to
where they came
from."
The Tlingit
section is roughly
100 feet and will
include tunics,
hats, ceremonial
dress, artwork,
potlatch dishes
and more. The
collection
includes a Tlingit
carved chest from
Klukwan that could
date back as far
as 1790. A bear
bowl, also from
Klukwan, may be as
old as 135 years.
Some of the
Tlingit art is
more recent, from
the last 50 years.
"There was a
lot to pick from,
just a terrific
amount of stuff
that the museum
had in storage,"
Jackson said. "I
just wanted people
to see the
difference in the
art, and how
beautiful the
handiwork was
without all the
tools that are
available today."