The connection between traditional fashion, cultural footwear and modern identity
CBC Radio | Posted: December 11, 2015 4:30 PM | Last Updated: December 18, 2015
What you wear says a lot about you. It can tell people what you do for a living, what your social status is, and even where you come from. On the show this week, we're exploring the role fashion and footwear plays in sharing the stories and culture of indigenous Canada.
When Annie Bowkett moved from Pangnirtung, Nunavut to Winnipeg, she brought her talents for making traditional Inuit clothing by hand. We'll head into her small workshop to find out how she creates parkas, mitts and kamiks — sealskin and caribou footwear.
Performance artist Gregg Deal dressed up as a stereotype to address the image problems of the pop culture Indian. Find out how people responded.
The Bata Shoe Museum is featuring an exhibit called Beauty, Identity and Pride: Native North American Footwear. Curator Elizabeth Semmelhack explains how different traditions influence footwear, from design to construction. And how they were used to express status, and now, offer glimpses of history.
Cree Nisga'a Clothing is on the Tzeachten First Nation in Chilliwack, B.C. The family business creates custom, hand painted, mukluk type boots. But the business got started kind of by accident, when they sold their first pair right off owner Linda Lavallee's feet.
This week's playlist
Willie Mitchell - "Birchbark Letter"
John Trudell - "Rockin' the Res"
Samantha Crain - "Outside the Pale"
Kinnie Starr - "High Heels"