For many generations the Yup'ik (real) people of Alaska
have created beautifully expressive masks for their traditional dances and
ceremonies. Over the long winter darkness, dances and storytelling took place in
the qasgiq (communal men's house) using these masks to honor and connect to the
beings that made life possible in the Arctic environment. The masks were said
to have made the unseen world visible. Masked dancing was once at the heart of
Yup'ik spiritual and social life. It was a bridge between the ancient and the
new, the living and the dead and a person's own power and the greater powers of
the unseen world.
Many of the masks were visual representations of the
shaman's journeys into the spirit world and often portrayed spirit helpers. The
shaman either carved the masks himself or directed their carving. Masks were
carved from driftwood collected on the shores and painted with natural
pigments. The symbolic meaning of color varies with the creator of the mask and
the story he or she is relating. Recurring colors include red which may
sometimes symbolize life, blood, or give protection to the mask's wearer; black
which sometimes represents death or the afterlife; and white which sometimes
can mean living or winter. Painted spots appear on many masks and even on some
participants. They represent snowflakes, stars, or eyes, depending on the
mask's story. As in healing, the artist's touch may have been as significant
as the mark left behind.
Masks were decorated with teeth, beads, animal hides, feathers
and other organic materials related to the story being portrayed. They differ
in size from forehead and finger 'maskettes' to enormous constructions that
dancers need external supports to perform with. Ingenious theatrical devices
were created and hung from the roof of the communal house, and beautiful
costumes were sewn, all as part of a complex enactment of sacred stories.
After Christian contact in the late nineteenth century,
masked dancing was suppressed, and today it is not practiced as it was before
in the Yup'ik villages. However, the art of making masks is once again making its way into
the traditional lifestyles of the Yup'ik.
The elders are trying to get the young people involved and it's still a
work in progress, but the revival of mask making is a hopeful story of Yup'ik
continuity.
No comments:
Post a Comment