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Frontlet depicting Frog by Lelooska - Don Smith (1933-1996)

Frontlet depicting Frog by Lelooska - Don Smith (1933-1996)

Regular price $0.00 Sale

Frontlet depicting Frog, 1969
by Lelooska - Don Smith (1933-1996)
Adopted by the Sewide Family, Kwakwaka'wakw First Nation
red cedar, abalone inlay, pigment
7 3/8" high x 6 1/4" wide x 2" deepNo

Master carver and storyteller Lelooska was born Don Smith in Sonora, California in 1933. He was called Yana the Bear at birth, but it was the name Lelooska, meaning "To Cut Against Wood With a Knife," that brought him fame. Lelooska and his family moved to Hubbard, Oregon in 1936, where they ran a gift shop, and where Lelooska began to carve under the tutelage of his grandfather.

Though Lelooska was taught the traditional art and stories of the Cherokee Nation, it was the carvings and myths of the Northwest Coast culture that inspired him to make carving a full time endeavor. He won acclaim for his totem poles, carved out of old-growth cedar. He is said to have carved 100 or more totem poles and thousands of masks, using only the D adze, the elbow adze and the hooked knives.

During Oregon's Centennial in 1959, Lelooska carved a 50-foot totem pole celebrating the state's role in Operation Deep Freeze, which established a scientific station at the geographic South Pole. The pole now towers over Washington Park Zoo in Portland. He carved a duplicate 30-foot Friendship pole, which dominates the entrance to the international airport at Christchurch, New Zealand.

In 1961, the family moved to Ariel, Washington. Volunteers helped build a traditional Northwest Coast longhouse, a log museum, and later an art gallery. In 1968, Chief James Sewid, hereditary chief of the Kwakwaka’wakw First Nation on Vancouver Island, held a potlatch to adopt Lelooska, his mother Shona-Hah, his sister Patty Fawn, and his brothers Tsungani and Ayunli into the Sewid family.

Lelooska and his family offered dance and storytelling performances based on traditional Kwakwaka’wakw First Nation ceremonies and potlatches. Lelooska, with his deep and commanding voice, brought to life the myths and legends.

The longhouse shows were among his proudest accomplishments, attracting 25,000 visitors a year. There were also workshops in American Indian culture offered by the nonprofit Lelooska Foundation, where students can earn college credits from Central Washington University and Lewis & Clark College.

Lelooska received an honorary doctorate from Lewis & Clark for his leadership in American Indian art and culture. He also was given the school's Aubrey Watzek Award for his contributions to American Indian culture. Lelooska has works in both Private and Public Collections including the National Museum of the American Indian, The Chicago Art Institute, The Portland Art Museum, and The Estate Collection of Arlene and Jordan Schnitzer. 

Lelooska passed away peacefully at his home in Ariel, Washington in 1996. 

 

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