Gardners Art through the Ages A Global History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
North America

In many parts of the United States and Canada, archaeologists have
identified indigenous cultures that date back as far as 12,000 years ago.
Most of the surviving art objects, however, come from the past 2,000
years. Scholars divide the vast and varied territory of North America
(MAP14-3) into cultural regions based on the relative homogeneity
of language and social and artistic patterns. Native lifestyles varied
widely over the continent, ranging from small bands of migratory
hunters to settled—at times even urban—agriculturalists. Among the
art-producing peoples who inhabited the continent before the arrival
of Europeans are the Eskimo of Alaska and the Inuit of Canada, who
hunted and fished across the Arctic from Greenland to Siberia, and the
maize farmers of the American Southwest, who wrested water from
their arid environment and built effective irrigation systems as well as
roads and spectacular cliff dwellings. Farmers also settled in the vast,
temperate Eastern Woodlands—ranging from eastern Canada to
Florida and from the Atlantic to the Great Plains west of the Missis-
sippi. Some of them left behind great earthen mounds that once func-
tioned as their elite residences or burial places.


Eskimo


The Eskimoan peoples originally migrated to North America across
the Bering Strait. During the early first millennium CE, a community
of Eskimo sea mammal hunters and tool makers occupied parts of


MAP14-3Early Native American sites in North America.

Cliff
Palace Cahokia

Serpent
Mound

Ipiutak

ATLANTIC
OCEAN

ATLANTIC
OCEAN

PACIFIC
OCEAN

PACIFIC
OCEAN

Gulf of MexicoGulf of Mexico

Hudson
Bay

Hudson
Bay

Bering
Sea

Bering
Sea

Beaufort
Sea

Beaufort
Sea Baffin
Bay

Baffin
Bay

Labrador
Sea

Labrador
Sea

Bering
Strai
t
Bering
Strai
t

Color

ado

R.

M
issi

ssip

pi

.R
Ohio

R.

RioGrand
e

Mesa Verde
Chaco Canyon

Great
Basin

Southwest

Plains

Woodlands

Ea

st

er

n

W

oo

dl

an

ds

ANCESTRAL
PUEBLOANS
ZUNI

ADENA

HOPI

MIMBRES

NA
VAJ
O

ESKIMO

INUIT

INUIT

M
ISS

ISS

IPP

IAN
PUEBLO

CANADA

UNITED STATES

MEXICO

Alaska

0 500 1000 miles
0 500 1000 kilometers

Archaeological site

North America 387

Alaska during the Norton, or Old Bering Sea, culture that began
around 500 BCE.
IPIUTAK MASK Archaeologists have uncovered major works of
Eskimo art at the Ipiutak site at Point Hope. The finds include a va-
riety of burial goods as well as tools. A burial mask (FIG. 14-27)
datable to ca. 100 CEis of special interest. The artist fashioned the
mask out of walrus ivory, the material used for most Arctic artworks
because of the scarcity of wood in the region. The mask consists of
nine carefully shaped parts that are interrelated to produce several
faces, both human and animal, echoing the transformation theme
noted in other ancient American cultures. The confident, subtle
composition in shallow relief is a tribute to the artist’s imaginative
control over the material. The mask’s abstract circles and curved
lines are common motifs on the decorated tools discovered at Point
Hope. For centuries, the Eskimo also carved human and animal fig-
ures, always at small scale, reflecting a nomadic lifestyle that re-
quired the creation of portable objects.

Woodlands
Early Native American artists also excelled in working stone into a
variety of utilitarian and ceremonial objects. Some early cultures,
such as those of the woodlands east of the Mississippi River, also es-
tablished great urban centers with populations sometimes exceeding
20,000.
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