Family wants trail-blazing grandmother's carving contributions to receive more recognition - Action News
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British Columbia

Family wants trail-blazing grandmother's carving contributions to receive more recognition

Kwakwaka'wakwcarver Ellen Neel began carving in the 1920s and was among the first famous female carvers on the Northwest Coast but her story is little known outside art circles and Indigenous communities something her family is hoping to change.

Ellen Neel, a Kwakwakawakw carver, began carving in the 1920s

A red cedar mask, Dsonakwa, carved by Ellen Neel in 1955. (Courtesy of the Lattimer Gallery )

Kwakwaka'wakwcarver Ellen Neel began carving in the 1920s and was among the first famous female carvers on the Northwest Coast but her story is little known outside art circles and Indigenous communities something her family is hoping to change.

Lou-ann Neel, Ellen Neel'sgranddaughter, was only three years old when the elder Neel died. Neel never met her grandmother, but when she took up her own artistic practice as a designer she began to see a resemblance between her work and her grandmother's.

"I was really inspired by her work when I started to learn about it in my teenage years and I wondered why I couldn't find any information about her when I went to the library, and later when the internet became available, there still wasn't all that much information about her," NeeltoldStephen Quinn, the host ofCBC's The Early Edition.

Born in 1916, Ellen Neelbegan carving at an early age under the tutelage of her elders. She was one of the first professional femalecarvers of her era, going on to carve iconic totem poles for Stanley Park and the University of British Columbia.

She createdthe Totemland Pole for the Totemland Society, a group that promoted the City ofVancouver. Neel would carve a creation forprominent guests and celebrities who visited Vancouver, includingKatherine Hepburn and Bob Hope.

Actress Katherine Hepburn receives a totem pole carved by Ellen Neel from Harry Duker of the Totem Land Society. (VPL Special Collections)

Lou-ann Neel, however, says her grandmotherwasn't the only female carverand there were many others who carved in Northwest Coast communities at the time. She referred toa conversation with the late Tony Hunt, another Kwakwaka'wakw artist, who saidboth men and women were taught how to carve.

"He said there might have been a time when there were certain items for ceremony that may have been carved only by men, and at the same time, certain items that may have only been carved by women," Neel said.

Colonial incursions, including the potlatch banand the imposition of a patriarchal culture where women are excluded, contributed to Ellen Neel's contributions perhaps not getting the recognition they deserved, said Neel.

"The 40s, 50s, 60s, were pretty low-key in terms of promoting women as carvers. Because the narrative had really sunken in and taken hold," said Neel.

Lou-ann Neel wants the world to know more about her grandmother, Ellen Neel, a master Kwakwakawakw carver. (Beth Carter/Submitted by Lou-ann Neel)

Neel said there's been more recognition of her grandmotherin the last 20 years, and she wants to credit her for her extraordinary vision.

"She talked about wanting to see our designs on everyday clothingand home decorand all of the things we see now in the marketplace and take for granted," said Neel.

"She was a force to be reckoned with."

Listen to the segment on CBC's The Early Edition here:

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story gave an inaccurate time for the start of Ellen Neel's carving career. Neel began carving in the 1920s.
    Mar 22, 2021 1:41 PM PT

With files from The Early Edition