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Smithsonian Folkways Recordings




Inspirations from the Forest
 


  
Introduction
Artistic Inspirations
   Historical
   Contemporary
   Natural Materials
   From Nature
   Recording Nature
   Recording Change
Telling a Story
Passing it On
Conservation
Next Steps
Exhibition Schedule

 

Related Links
Watch Keith Bear make a flute
Hear Michelle Ryan talk about her quilt

 

The beauty of the land inspires artists to transform natural materials into impressive pieces of art. It also helps them maintain a special connection to the land.

On the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation in North Dakota, Keith Bear (right) and one of his apprentices, Brendan Gourneau, play the flutes they have constructed as part of a Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Program funded by the National Endowment for the Arts. Photo by Mike Miller, courtesy North Dakota Council on the Arts.
Keith Bear, a flute maker, storyteller, singer, and dancer from the Mandan-Hidatsa tribes in North Dakota, finds inspiration in surprising places. Where others may see a branch or a discarded piece of scrap lumber, he envisions a flute. "I think of the quality and beauty of that wood, and look inside and find the flute." He has transformed fence posts, tree branches, and even doorjambs into beautiful flutes, breathing new life into old forms.

Michelle Ryan hopes that "each time someone stops to look at the quilt, and their eyes wander through the forest or across the stream or through the meadows, it will bring back memories of something they have actually observed or experienced in the forest." Photo by Kimberly Stryker, Smithsonian Institution.
Michelle Ryan, a quilter from Montana, relied on her childhood memories to design her Forest Service Centennial quilt. She spent many hours of her formative years "observing plants, water, and wildflowers, looking under rocks, and perceiving lighting changes on the forest."

Photo by Lisa Rathje, Smithsonian Institution.
For
her quilt, stitched by over eighty volunteers, she selected assorted shades and colors to give the illusion of texture and to reflect the variety of lighting and vegetation in the forest. 


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