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bone paint pot


Nom de l'objet : bone paint pot
Artiste ou artisan : displayed as example of painting equipment of the Naskapi
Numéro de catalogue : III-B-63
Province d'origine : unknown
Province d'utilisation : unknown
Culture : Barren Ground Innu
Contexte culturel : A block of wood with one or more bowl-shaped cavities cut in it...serves to hold the mixed paints, especially when several colors are to be used in succession. Small wooden bowls are also employed - Turner (1979[1894]:133).VanStone suggests that these bowls or cups are rightly called paint mortars. William Duncan's Strong collection at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago contains two paint mortars, one of which is a rectangular block of birchwood with rounded ends, into which two bowl-shaped cavities and one rectangular cavity have been cut. The bottom of one round cavity has been painted with red pigment and the other with blue. The rectangular cavity was probably for the water-oil vehicle...The second mortar is simply a small oval bowl of birchwood - VanStone (1985:38).Drapeau lists peshaikanlakan as godet à peinture.
Date de fin de production : unknown
Fonctions : This must be unime kateakant (container or paint dish) - Munik (Gregoire) Rich.This must be similar to the one we looked at - the container for unaman, but this one is not used yet. This must be used for unaman, and it is made out of a bone - Pinamen (Rich) Katshinak.For an uname container. This is used for uname (paint), for painting. It can be used both at the same time, and whichever paint that is put in it. The paint stick can only be dipped in the container when it's ready to use - Uniam Katshinak.Container for unaman (paint). I think that's what it is for. People used it for storing their unaman (paints). The blue unaman (paint) has been used in this container. I don't see any stencils here - Matinen (Rich) Katshinak.
Publications ou références : James W. VanStone. 1985. Material Culture of the Davis Inlet and Barren Ground Naskapi: the William Duncan Strong Collection. Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History. Fieldiana, Anthropology New Series No.7. Lucien M. Turner. 1979[1894]. Indians and Eskimos in the Quebec-Labrador Peninsula. Quebec: Presses COMEDITEX. Lynn Drapeau. 1999. Dictionnaire Montagnais-français. Sainte-Foy: Presses de l'Université du Québec.
Établissement : The Rooms, Provincial Museum  Facebook-The Rooms, Provincial Museum  Twitter-The Rooms, Provincial Museum 
Ville de l'établissement : St. John's
Province de l'établissement : Newfoundland and Labrador

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