My latest work from the Indigenous Art History workshop
This is my Dreamcatcher.
dream:
bawaajigan : a dream, a vision
Source: https://ojibwe.lib.umn.edu/main-entry/bawaajigan-ni
Ojibwe Dreamcatcher Legend
This is the way the old Ojibwe say Spider Woman helped bring Grandfather Sun back to the people. To this day, Spider Woman will build her special lodge before dawn. If you are awake at dawn—as you should be—look for her lodge and you will see how she captured the sunrise as the light sparkles on the dew which is gathered there.
Spider Woman took care of her children, the people of the land, and she continues to do so to this day. Long ago, in the ancient world of the Ojibwe Nation, the Clans were all located in one area called Turtle Island. When the Ojibwe Nation dispersed to the four corners of North America, Spider Woman had a difficult time making journeys to all those baby cradle boards, so the mothers, sisters, and grandmothers weaved magical webs for the new babies using willow hoops and sinew. The shape of the circle represents how Grandfather Sun travels across the sky.
The dreamcatcher filters out the bad dreams and allows only good thoughts to enter into our minds when we are asleep. A small hoop in the center of the dreamcatcher is where the good dreams come through. With the first rays of sunlight, the bad dreams will perish.
https://www.wernative.org/articles/ojibwe-dreamcatcher-legend
I am a Métis youth taking a course on Indigenous Art and History in Canada. I will share my work here along with some of the thoughts and ideas I have while creating these works. I will also share some of the Ojibwe and Algonquin language we are learning.
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Beautiful work.