Cherokee basketry: WCU’s Fariello publishes new book
Fariello heads up the Craft Revival Project at WCU.
Here’s an excerpt from a story by Jill Ingram for The Reporter:
An author, editor and former research fellow at the Smithsonian Museum of American Art, Fariello most recently turned her attention to Cherokee basketry, a thousands-year-old tradition, passed from mother to daughter, that she believes is integral to Cherokee culture. Fariello’s new book, titled “Cherokee Basketry: From the Hands of our Elders,” studies Cherokee baskets and basket-makers who lived during the first half of the 20th century.
The project reinforced Fariello’s understanding that for Cherokee people, “the making of things is significant to their culture and their identity,” a concept foreign to many people in contemporary, mainstream culture, she said. The Cherokees’ use of natural resources as basket materials gave Fariello an appreciation of the environmental sustainability and ecological balance also inherent in the culture.
Read the entire story and view photos here.
Tags: Anna Fariello, art, Cherokee, cherokee culture, craft revival, Jill Ingram, The Reporter, Western Carolina University
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