Utari:Ainu. Aboriginal Peoples of Japan. The Collection of Joseph G. Gerena Patrick and Ondine Mestdagh Gallery. For Marcus and Simon

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Utari:Ainu Aboriginal Peoples of Japan The Collection of Joseph G. Gerena Patrick and Ondine Mestdagh Gallery For Marcus and Simon

Introduction Indigenous to Hokkaido, the northernmost island of the Japanese archipelago, the Ainu are a Paleo-Mongoloid people who share genetic heritage with Amerindians, Tibetans, and Okinawans. The Ainu are probably related, as well, to the Jômon (14,000-300 BC), the original people of Japan pushed north by the arrival from Korea of the Yayoi from whom the greater present day Japanese population descends. In their language Ainu means the people. Today, however, ethnic Ainu refer to themselves as Utari, meaning comrade. Historically Ainu men were tall, wavy-haired, and wore thick beards, hence the sobriquet the hairy Ainu. Ainu women displayed deep blue tattoos around the mouth, a process first begun in childhood and fully completed when a girl came of age. A hunter-gatherer society, the Ainu survived mainly by deer hunting and salmon fishing, with some limited agriculture. Their deeply animistic belief system holds that spirit forces, kamui, permeate all natural things fire, earth, mountains, land animals, fish, and plants. Central to their spirit world, bears were worshiped and also sacrificed. Malevolent spirits were kept at bay through rituals that included the use of ikupasuy, finely carved wood prayer sticks ornamented with protective spiral patterns, morew. These patterns were carved onto other wood objects such as ritual trays and bowls, as well as embroidered or appliqued onto costumes such as the renowned Ainu robes. In the late 19th century the Japanese government essentially enslaved the Ainu, forced them to take Japanese names, confiscated their land, forbade them to hunt deer or fish salmon, and outlawed the practice of the Ainu religion including bear sacrifice, tattooing, and use of the Ainu language itself. Consequently, very little of Ainu material culture survives. Joseph Gerena was a New York dealer with a particular love for the un-categorizable object and who time and again pioneered collecting in offbeat or neglected areas.

Photographs and postcards Early 20th century Following page: Makemono of Ainu men preparing bear for sacrifice by carving wooden sticks (after Shimanojo Murakami) Inaws Late Edo Period, Mid 19th century

Ikupausy Prayer Sticks The Ainu did not pray directly to their gods but used an Ikupasuy prayer stick to channel their spiritual links with the animistic world. Ainu people did not own many material possessions and a man revered and prized his ikupausy. Each prayer stick is unique, but favorite elements such as fish scale patterns, magic eyes, animal and fish forms are often seen as surface decoration. Ikupausy have often been mistakenly called mustache lifters because of their use while consuming alchoholic drinks as part of Ainu rituals of ancestor worship. The sticks are physical manifestations of prayers, which when placed close to the mouth are involved with the process of shamanic transformation. The effects of the alcohol helped carry the soul to another state of being. Wood ritual prayer stick with whale and boat motif Ikupasuy Late Edo, c.1850-1868

Wood ritual prayer sticks with varied forms, motifs, and finishes Ikupasuy Late Edo/Meiji Periods, c.1850-1880

Wrapped cotton and reed backrest Chitarpe Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880

Grass net bag with Russian glass bead Ketush Meiji Period, c.1890-1912 Embroidered elm bark fiber bag Ketush Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880 Elm bark fiber and appliqued cotton man s sword sash Emushat Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880

Elm bark fiber and cotton bag Ketush Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880= Robes and Textiles The best known object from Ainu culture is the long robe made from strips of elm bark- attush. Woven on looms by women in winter, robes were made from bark harvested in summer and softened by chewing. Around the neck and sleeves, areas that deteriorate with use, blue cloth is appliquéd in the same spiral patterns that appear on household and ritual objects. Thus, the spiral patterned blue cloth served equally as practical protection from wear and as magical protection from evil spirits. Beginning in the 19th century the Ainu obtained cotton and silk trade cloth from the Japanese that offered new possibilities for creative expression in garments, resulting notably in the elaborately embroidered cloth robe with delicate appliqué- ruunpe. The Gerena Collection presents classical examples of both attush and ruunpe, each featuring morew, curvilinear motifs corresponding to decorative elements found on ancient Jômon figural pottery of the first millennium BC.

Elm bark fiber and cotton robe Attush Meiji Period, c.1880

Elm Cotton appliqué robe Ruunpe Meiji/Showa Period, c.1910-1920

Woman s necklace, copper and glass Shitoki Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880

Three incised bone toggles or amulets Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880 Incised bone necklace Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880 Incised bone needlecase Chispo Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880

Carved wood tray Ita Late Edo Period, c.1850-1868 Carved spoon Sorunpe Meiji Period, c.1900 Decorated Spoon, dated 1907 Sorunpe Meiji Period, c.1880-1900

Carved wood tray Ita Late Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880 Wood bowl with decorated lug Chepenipapo Late Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880 Household Objects Trays, bowls, and utensils were carved with fine decoration to please the eye. At some point in ancient history, such patterns may have served to protect against food spoiled by black magic.the patterns are consistent in the use of the talismanic morew motif known to us from the curvilinear patterns on Ainu textiles. Ethnographers have noted that such designs were most likely intended solely to be aesthetically pleasing and have often been compared with the dishes and spoons of the Pacific Northwest Coast Wood bowl with decorated handles Mikiri Late Edo Period, c.1850-1868

Man s workbox/pillow Pon Suop Late Edo Period, c.1850-1860 Wood pipe holder and tobacco box Tampaku-op Late Edo/Meiji Period, c.1860-1880

Knife with laquer and bone decorated sheath Mikiri Late Edo Period, c.1850-1868 Knives and Swords An Ainu male never went anywhere without his dagger, makiri, which could be used as a cutting tool as well as for defense.the classical form of the knife might be personalized with patterns found pleasing to the owner. The Ainu short ritual sword, pons emush, and the longer, emush, display greater similarities to the dominate Japanese culture samurai style sword but with uniquely Ainu features. Because metal blades were surpressed by the Japanese governments and made illegal to own, we often encounter swords that have wooden blades instead. Weapons were often included in Ainu burial to accompany the dead into the next world.

Knife with laquer and bone decorated sheath Mikiri Late Edo Period, c.1850-1868

Lacquered wood ceremonial sword Emush with iron and brass Tsuba, no blade Late Edo Period, c.1850-1868 Lacquered wood ceremonial sword Pons Emush, no blade Late Edo Period, c.1850-1868

Colophon With thanks to Tom, Fred, Arnold, Mark, Jeff, and Stan Concept Marge Levin, New York Photography Paul Louis, Brussels Text Thomas Murray and Fred Schultz Graphic Production Sophie Lorent, Brussels Printed and bound in September 2014 in Couillet by Crousse Graphic Dépôt Légal: Bibliothèque royale de Belgique D/2014/10 Mestdagh Patrick, éditeur