Meet the designer making wearable art that comes out of Indigenous teachings and culture

Tamara Lee-Anne Cardinal's jingle dresses draw on history through fashion

Media | Indigenous teachings are the driving force behind this designer's jingle dresses and tea bag couture

Caption: Artist Tamara Lee-Anne Cardinal explains how time with Elders and learning her own traditional name contributed to her new Jingle Dress design.

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The jingle dress(external link), a garment typically made with rows of cones that bounce and create percussive rhythm when their wearer performs, has its own back story in which the wearer performs a dance to heal sick or hurt members of her community. This is the history artist Tamara Lee-Anne Cardinal(external link) draws upon when she creates her own jingle dresses, just one part of her multidisciplinary practice that includes sculpture(external link) and performance(external link) along with her design of tea bag clothing(external link).
Cardinal's cultural journey, art practice and advocacy for Indigenous rights in Alberta led her to Elders Darryl and Linda Brass. They gifted the artist with her traditional name, Mahihkan Acahkos Iskwew (or Wolf Star Woman), and now Cardinal is making a new jingle dress to celebrate its meaning. In this video, Cardinal tells you what the jingle dress means to her and gives you access to her studio as she begins work on her newest creation.
See Tamara Lee-Anne Cardinal's work at Stride Gallery(external link) in Calgary until May 19.
Watch Exhibitionists(external link) online. New episodes Friday nights at 12:30am (1am NT) and Sundays at 3:30pm (4pm NT) on CBC Television.